Table 2.
eHealth-related data (N=307).
| Variable | Value | |||
| No eHealth experience, n (%) | 208 (67.8) | |||
| Duration of daily private internet use (hours), mean (SD) | 2.9 (1.22) | |||
| Duration of daily private internet use (hours), n (%) | ||||
|
|
0 to 1 | 39 (12.7) | ||
|
|
1 to 2 | 83 (27) | ||
|
|
2 to 3 | 99 (32.2) | ||
|
|
3 to 4 | 34 (13.7) | ||
|
|
>4 | 44 (14.3) | ||
| Confidence in dealing with eHealth, mean (SD) | 4.17 (1.01) | |||
| Confidence in dealing with eHealth, n (%) | ||||
|
|
Very little confident | 10 (3.3) | ||
|
|
A little unconfident | 14 (4.6) | ||
|
|
Neutral | 33 (10.7) | ||
|
|
Rather confident | 106 (34.5) | ||
|
|
Very confident | 144 (46.9) | ||
| Internet anxietya, mean (SD) | 1.78 (0.83) | |||
| eHealth literacyb, mean (SD) | 30.40 (5.34) | |||
| UTAUTc core predictors, mean (SD) | ||||
|
|
Behavioral intention | 3.67 (0.89) | ||
|
|
Social influence | 3.46 (0.77) | ||
|
|
Performance expectancy | 3.36 (0.84) | ||
|
|
Effort expectancy | 3.47 (0.79) | ||
aValues above 5 indicate a very high level of internet anxiety (range 1-5).
bHigher scores indicate a higher level of eHealth literacy (range 8-40).
cUTAUT: Unified Theory of Acceptance and Use of Technology.