When Online and Offline Environments Meet

Nadine Bol, Tatiana Gromova, K. Tenfelde, M. Antheunis
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Abstract

Theory of situational privacy and self-disclosure posits that perceived levels of privacy are determined by perceptions of the environment, and that certain levels of privacy are necessary for self-disclosure. In video consultations, auditory and visual aspects of the doctor’s environment can cause patients to experience more or less privacy. To provide empirical evidence for these theoretical assumptions, we conducted a 2 (auditory environmental factor: doctor wearing headphones vs. not) by 2 (visual environmental factor: doctor showing the entire office vs. not) between-subjects scenario-based experiment (N = 163). Participants imagined themselves in a video consultation with a doctor and reported their information and territory privacy concerns and willingness to disclose to the doctor. Results showed that the ability to see the doctor’s entire office led to lower information privacy concerns, which – in turn – were associated with increased willingness to disclose medical information to a doctor. Wearing headphones by the doctor did not affect privacy concerns and self-disclosure. Manipulations of both the auditory and visual environment were not significantly associated with territory privacy concerns. These results provide direction for further research on environmental factors and their impact on patients’ privacy concerns and self-disclosure during medical video communications.
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当在线和离线环境相遇
情境隐私和自我披露理论认为,感知到的隐私程度取决于对环境的感知,而一定程度的隐私是自我披露所必需的。在视频会诊中,医生所处环境的听觉和视觉方面会让患者感受到或多或少的隐私。为了给这些理论假设提供实证证据,我们进行了一个 2(听觉环境因素:医生戴耳机与不戴耳机)乘 2(视觉环境因素:医生展示整个办公室与不展示整个办公室)的主体间情景实验(N = 163)。参与者想象自己与医生进行视频会诊,并报告他们对信息和领域隐私的担忧以及向医生披露的意愿。结果表明,能够看到医生的整个办公室会降低对信息隐私的担忧,而这反过来又会增加向医生披露医疗信息的意愿。医生戴耳机并不会影响隐私顾虑和自我披露。对听觉和视觉环境的操控与境内隐私问题没有明显关联。这些结果为进一步研究环境因素及其对患者在医疗视频交流中的隐私顾虑和自我披露的影响提供了方向。
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