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Stimuli Influencing Engagement, Satisfaction, and Intention to Use Telemedicine Services: An Integrative Model

Telemedicine ensures quality, cost-effective, and equally accessible healthcare services for everyone. Nonetheless, a poor usage rate could curb its progression in developing cultures like Bangladesh. Therefore, this research examines how external stimuli promote the continuous usage intentions of s...

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Autores principales: Amin, Ruhul, Hossain, Md. Alamgir, Uddin, Md. Minhaj, Jony, Mohammad Toriqul Islam, Kim, Minho
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: MDPI 2022
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9318589/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35885854
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/healthcare10071327
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author Amin, Ruhul
Hossain, Md. Alamgir
Uddin, Md. Minhaj
Jony, Mohammad Toriqul Islam
Kim, Minho
author_facet Amin, Ruhul
Hossain, Md. Alamgir
Uddin, Md. Minhaj
Jony, Mohammad Toriqul Islam
Kim, Minho
author_sort Amin, Ruhul
collection PubMed
description Telemedicine ensures quality, cost-effective, and equally accessible healthcare services for everyone. Nonetheless, a poor usage rate could curb its progression in developing cultures like Bangladesh. Therefore, this research examines how external stimuli promote the continuous usage intentions of synchronous telemedicine services through engagement and satisfaction by deploying the stimulus-organism-response framework. A final sample of 312 telemedicine users was analyzed using the structural equation modeling in AMOS. The average age of the participants was 26.28 (std. deviation 5.53), and their average use of telemedicine was 2.39 times (std. deviation 1.31) over the last six months. This study empirically endorsed that the stimuli, including performance expectancy, information quality, and contamination avoidance, as well as organismic factors such as engagement and satisfaction, directly impacted the continuance desires for telemedicine use. In addition, the analyses validated the mediation roles of engagement and satisfaction. Furthermore, performance and effort expectancies influenced engagement, which affected satisfaction along with performance expectancy, functionality, and information quality. Accordingly, telemedicine facilitators should integrate these critical attributes into the system to sustain engagement, satisfaction, and usage intentions. This study has pioneered the effects of performance and effort expectancies on continuous usage intentions facilitated by engagement and satisfaction in the telemedicine landscape.
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spelling pubmed-93185892022-07-27 Stimuli Influencing Engagement, Satisfaction, and Intention to Use Telemedicine Services: An Integrative Model Amin, Ruhul Hossain, Md. Alamgir Uddin, Md. Minhaj Jony, Mohammad Toriqul Islam Kim, Minho Healthcare (Basel) Article Telemedicine ensures quality, cost-effective, and equally accessible healthcare services for everyone. Nonetheless, a poor usage rate could curb its progression in developing cultures like Bangladesh. Therefore, this research examines how external stimuli promote the continuous usage intentions of synchronous telemedicine services through engagement and satisfaction by deploying the stimulus-organism-response framework. A final sample of 312 telemedicine users was analyzed using the structural equation modeling in AMOS. The average age of the participants was 26.28 (std. deviation 5.53), and their average use of telemedicine was 2.39 times (std. deviation 1.31) over the last six months. This study empirically endorsed that the stimuli, including performance expectancy, information quality, and contamination avoidance, as well as organismic factors such as engagement and satisfaction, directly impacted the continuance desires for telemedicine use. In addition, the analyses validated the mediation roles of engagement and satisfaction. Furthermore, performance and effort expectancies influenced engagement, which affected satisfaction along with performance expectancy, functionality, and information quality. Accordingly, telemedicine facilitators should integrate these critical attributes into the system to sustain engagement, satisfaction, and usage intentions. This study has pioneered the effects of performance and effort expectancies on continuous usage intentions facilitated by engagement and satisfaction in the telemedicine landscape. MDPI 2022-07-18 /pmc/articles/PMC9318589/ /pubmed/35885854 http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/healthcare10071327 Text en © 2022 by the authors. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
spellingShingle Article
Amin, Ruhul
Hossain, Md. Alamgir
Uddin, Md. Minhaj
Jony, Mohammad Toriqul Islam
Kim, Minho
Stimuli Influencing Engagement, Satisfaction, and Intention to Use Telemedicine Services: An Integrative Model
title Stimuli Influencing Engagement, Satisfaction, and Intention to Use Telemedicine Services: An Integrative Model
title_full Stimuli Influencing Engagement, Satisfaction, and Intention to Use Telemedicine Services: An Integrative Model
title_fullStr Stimuli Influencing Engagement, Satisfaction, and Intention to Use Telemedicine Services: An Integrative Model
title_full_unstemmed Stimuli Influencing Engagement, Satisfaction, and Intention to Use Telemedicine Services: An Integrative Model
title_short Stimuli Influencing Engagement, Satisfaction, and Intention to Use Telemedicine Services: An Integrative Model
title_sort stimuli influencing engagement, satisfaction, and intention to use telemedicine services: an integrative model
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9318589/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35885854
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/healthcare10071327
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