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      Connecting generations: developing co-design methods for older adults and children

      , , , , , ,
      Behaviour & Information Technology
      Informa UK Limited

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          Writing for Friends and Family: The Interpersonal Nature of Blogs

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            Older adults' health information wants in the internet age: implications for patient-provider relationships.

            A qualitative, exploratory study was conducted in the summer of 2007 to investigate older adults' preferences for health information and participation in decision making. The study involved in-depth individual and focus group interviewing with a total of 20 older Internet users and nonusers. Grounded theory was used to conduct the data analysis and construct the theory that best explains the data. The concept of health information wants (HIW), or health information that one would like to have and use to make important health decisions that may or may not be directly related to diagnosis or standard treatment, emerged from the data analysis and led to the development of the HIW framework. This framework encompasses four types of HIW that have varying properties and positions on the decision-making spectrum. While Internet use has not changed these older adults' reliance on medical professionals for diagnostic or standard treatment decisions (and reliance on professionals for information needed to make those decisions), it has opened up new venues for obtaining information to make decisions in broader scopes. Thus, both the Internet and the perpetuating influence of the provider-dependent model are at play in the patient-provider relationships of these older adults.
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              New theoretical approaches for human-computer interaction

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                Author and article information

                Journal
                Behaviour & Information Technology
                Behaviour & Information Technology
                Informa UK Limited
                0144-929X
                1362-3001
                April 2012
                April 2012
                : 31
                : 4
                : 413-423
                Article
                10.1080/01449291003793793
                08e87138-9a54-4c57-b1b9-f56c9b244693
                © 2012
                History

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