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Do patients trust computers?
241
Citations
19
References
2006
Year
Behavioral Decision MakingClinical Decision-makingSocial PsychologySocial InfluenceIndividual Decision MakingPsychologyMedical RecommendationsSocial SciencesMedical Decision MakingClinical SystemManagementDifferent Medical ScenariosTelehealthDecision TheoryBehavioral SciencesAssistive TechnologyMedicineDecision AidEhealthComputer ProgramMedical Decision AnalysisExperimental PsychologyNursingMedical EthicsMedical PrivacyDecision SciencePersuasionHealth Informatics
Abstract In two studies, we inquired whether patients accept medical recommendations that come from a computer program rather than from a physician. In study 1, we found that subjects, when deciding whether to have an operation or not in different medical scenarios, were more likely to follow a recommendation that came from a physician than one that came from a computer program. Subjects stated that they would feel less responsible when following a recommendation than when deciding against it. Following a physician's recommendation reduced the feeling of responsibility more than following that of a computer program. The difference in feeling of responsibility when following versus when not following a recommendation partly mediated subjects' inclination to follow the physician more. In our second study, we found that subjects were more decision seeking when they received a recommendation or decision from a computer program, and they were more decision seeking when they had to accept a decision than when they received a recommendation. Subjects also trusted the physician more than the computer program to make a good recommendation or decision. Copyright © 2006 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.
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