Abstract

BackgroundAn online health community (OHC) is a novel sharing channel through which doctors share professional health care knowledge with patients. While doctors have the authority to protect their patients’ privacy in OHCs, we have limited information on how doctors’ privacy protection choices affect their professional health care knowledge sharing with patients.ObjectiveWe examined the relationship between privacy protection and professional health care knowledge sharing in OHCs. Specifically, we examined the effects of privacy protection settings in an OHC on doctors’ interactive professional health care knowledge sharing and searching professional health care knowledge sharing (two dimensions of professional health care knowledge sharing). Moreover, we explored how such effects differ across different levels of disease stigma.MethodsWe collected the monthly panel data of 19,456 doctors from Good Doctor, one of the largest OHCs in China, from January 2008 to April 2016. A natural experimental empirical study with difference-in-difference analysis was conducted to test our hypotheses. The time fixed effect and the individual fixed effect were both considered to better identify the effects of a privacy protection setting on professional health care knowledge sharing. Additionally, a cross-sectional analysis was performed for a robust check.ResultsThe results indicate that the privacy protection setting has a significant positive effect on interactive professional health care knowledge sharing (β=.123, P<.001). However, the privacy protection setting has a significant negative effect on searching professional health care knowledge sharing (β=–.225, P=.05). Moreover, we found that high disease stigma positively impacts the effect of privacy protection on interactive professional health care knowledge sharing (coefficients are in the same valence) and negatively impacts the effects of privacy protection on searching professional health care knowledge sharing (coefficients are in the reverse valence).ConclusionsPrivacy protection has a bilateral effect on professional health care knowledge sharing (ie, a positive effect on interactive professional health care knowledge sharing and a negative effect on searching professional health care knowledge sharing). Such bilateral switches of professional health care knowledge sharing call for a balanced state in conjunction with practical implications. This research also identifies a moderate effect of disease stigma on privacy protection settings and professional health care knowledge sharing.

Highlights

  • Online Health Communities as Platforms for Sharing Professional Health Care KnowledgeThe internet has dynamically invaded, affected, and even changed many traditional industries, such as business, finance, social, and health care

  • Hypothesis 1 postulated that the privacy protection setting has a significant positive effect on interactive professional health care knowledge sharing

  • We observed in column 3 a significantly negative effect of the privacy protection setting on doctors’ searching professional health care knowledge sharing (β1=–.225, P=.050)

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Summary

Introduction

Online Health Communities as Platforms for Sharing Professional Health Care KnowledgeThe internet has dynamically invaded, affected, and even changed many traditional industries, such as business (electronic commerce [e-commerce]), finance (internet finance), social (virtual communities), and health care (telemedicine). Compared with the traditional offline mode, the capabilities of the internet (ie, its real-time communication across geographical boundaries, wide and swift spread, easy access, and rapid generation of users) have proven successful in the online mode Studies in both practice and research have focused on another internet capability: sharing, especially in the sharing economy. Results: The results indicate that the privacy protection setting has a significant positive effect on interactive professional health care knowledge sharing (β=.123, P

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