Seeking health care information: most consumers still on the sidelines.

Ha T Tu, J Lee Hargraves
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Abstract

Contrary to popular belief that Americans avidly seek health information--especially on the Internet--a majority of Americans in 2001 sought no information about a health concern, according to a Center for Studying Health Systems Change (HSC) study. And, instead of surfing the Internet, the 38 percent of Americans who did obtain health information relied more often on traditional sources such as books or magazines. People living with chronic conditions were more likely to seek information, yet more than half did not. Education is key to explaining differences among people. Those with a college degree are twice as likely to seek health information as people without a high school diploma. As consumers are confronted with more responsibility for making trade-offs among the cost, quality and accessibility of care, credible and understandable information will be critical to empowering consumers to take active roles in managing their care.

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寻求医疗保健信息:大多数消费者仍持观望态度。
人们普遍认为美国人热衷于搜索健康信息,尤其是在互联网上,但与此相反的是,根据健康系统变化研究中心(HSC)的一项研究,2001年大多数美国人并没有搜索任何与健康有关的信息。另外,38%的美国人在获取健康信息时更多地依靠书籍或杂志等传统渠道,而不是上网。患有慢性疾病的人更有可能寻求信息,但超过一半的人没有。教育是解释人与人之间差异的关键。拥有大学学位的人寻求健康信息的可能性是没有高中文凭的人的两倍。由于消费者在成本、质量和护理可及性之间面临着更多的权衡责任,可信和可理解的信息对于赋予消费者在管理其护理方面发挥积极作用至关重要。
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Small employers and self-insured health benefits: too small to succeed? Employer-sponsored health insurance: down but not out. Rising hospital employment of physicians: better quality, higher costs? Key findings from HSC's 2010 site visits: health care markets weather economic downturn, brace for health reform. Physicians slow to e-mail routinely with patients.
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