Abstract

BackgroundDespite the worldwide growth in mobile health (mHealth) tools and the possible benefits of mHealth for patients and health care providers, scientific research examining factors explaining the adoption level of mHealth tools remains scarce.ObjectiveWe performed an experimental vignette study to investigate how four factors related to the business model of an mHealth app affect its adoption and users’ willingness to pay: (1) the revenue model (ie, sharing data with third parties vs accepting advertisements); (2) the data protection model (General Data Protection Regulation [GDPR]-compliant data handling vs nonGDPR-compliant data handling); (3) the recommendation model (ie, doctor vs patient recommendation); and (4) the provider model (ie, pharmaceutical vs medical association provider). In addition, health consciousness, health information orientation, and electronic health literacy were explored as intrapersonal predictors of adoption.MethodsWe conducted an experimental study in three countries, Spain (N=800), Germany (N=800), and the Netherlands (N=416), to assess the influence of multiple business models and intrapersonal characteristics on the willingness to pay and intention to download a health app.ResultsThe revenue model did not affect willingness to pay or intentions to download the app in all three countries. In the Netherlands, data protection increased willingness to pay for the health app (P<.001). Moreover, in all three countries, data protection increased the likelihood of downloading the app (P<.001). In Germany (P=.04) and the Netherlands (P=.007), a doctor recommendation increased both willingness to pay and intention to download the health app. For all three countries, apps manufactured in association with a medical organization were more likely to be downloaded (P<.001). Finally, in all three countries, men, younger individuals, those with higher levels of education, and people with a health information orientation were willing to pay more for adoption of the health app and had a higher intention to download the app.ConclusionsThe finding that people want their data protected by legislation but are not willing to pay more for data protection suggests that in the context of mHealth, app privacy protection cannot be leveraged as a selling point. However, people do value a doctor recommendation and apps manufactured by a medical association, which particularly influence their intention to download an mHealth app.

Highlights

  • BackgroundOver the last decade, the number of people worldwide who own a mobile phone or another mobile electronic communication device has grown exponentially, fueling the development of mobile health-related services and functions [1,2]

  • The finding that people want their data protected by legislation but are not willing to pay more for data protection suggests that in the context of mobile health (mHealth), app privacy protection cannot be leveraged as a selling point

  • We focus on four factors related to the business model of app development, namely the revenue model, the degree of data protection offered to users, the presence of a doctor recommendation, and whether the app is developed by the pharmaceutical industry or by a medical association

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Summary

Introduction

The number of people worldwide who own a mobile phone or another mobile electronic communication device has grown exponentially, fueling the development of mobile health-related services and functions [1,2]. Mobile health (mHealth) [3] can be broadly defined as any medical or public health practice that is supported by mobile devices, ranging from the use of mobile phones to improving points of service data collection, care delivery, and patient communication, to the use of alternative wireless devices for real-time medication monitoring and adherence support (for an overview see [4]). Given the potential of mHealth for supporting the health of users, it is important to assess the factors that may motivate or hinder the successful adoption of mHealth technologies and apps. Despite the worldwide growth in mobile health (mHealth) tools and the possible benefits of mHealth for patients and health care providers, scientific research examining factors explaining the adoption level of mHealth tools remains scarce

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