Search Articles

View query in Help articles search

Search Results (1 to 10 of 707 Results)

Download search results: CSV END BibTex RIS


Exploring Laypersons’ Experiences With a Mobile Symptom Checker App as an Interface Between eHealth Literacy, Health Literacy, and Health-Related Behavior: Qualitative Interview Study

Exploring Laypersons’ Experiences With a Mobile Symptom Checker App as an Interface Between eHealth Literacy, Health Literacy, and Health-Related Behavior: Qualitative Interview Study

So that he then, I don’t know, doesn’t have to start again with Adam and Eve, but that he can already inquire more intensively. Mostly, users made a conscious decision to leave the app out of the social context of health care. They expected it to have a negative impact on patient-physician relationships: Interviewer: Did you also mention there (at the GP) that you used the app? Interview partner: No, because I have the impression that doctors tend to react badly to this.

Roland Koch, Marie-Theres Steffen, Anna-Jasmin Wetzel, Christine Preiser, Malte Klemmt, Hans-Jörg Ehni, Regina Mueller, Stefanie Joos

JMIR Form Res 2025;9:e60647