Abstract

BackgroundMobile health (mHealth) as an innovative form of information and communications technology can efficiently deliver high-quality health care by enhancing communication and health management, reducing costs, and increasing access to health services. An individual’s internal health locus of control (HLOC) is found to be associated with the behavioral intent to adopt mHealth. However, little is known about the underlying mechanism of this association.ObjectiveThe primary objective of this study was to test the mediation influence of the Unified Theory of Acceptance and Use of Technology (UTAUT) on the relationship between internal HLOC and the behavioral intention to use mHealth.MethodsA total of 374 responses were collected from Malaysian adult users of mHealth, using convenience and snowball sampling methods. Partial least squares structural equation modeling was used to analyze the data. Data were collected for variables, including demographics, internal HLOC, and modified UTAUT constructs (ie, performance expectancy, effort expectancy, and social influence).ResultsThe results showed that there was no direct relationship between internal HLOC and the behavioral intention to use mHealth (β=−0.039, P=.32). The indirect relationship between internal HLOC and the intent to adopt mHealth was supported, indicating that the UTAUT constructs performance expectancy (β=0.104, P<.001), effort expectancy (β=0.056, P=.02), and social influence (β=0.057, P=.002) mediated this relationship. The results showed full mediation, with total variance explained at 47.2%.ConclusionsThis study developed an integrative model, where a health-related disposition (internal HLOC), mHealth-related beliefs (performance expectancy and effort expectancy), and normative pressure (social influence) were combined to explain the underlying mechanism of the behavioral intent to adopt mHealth. The results showed that the intention to adopt mHealth is mediated by the influence of UTAUT factors, while HLOC has no direct effect on adoption intention. The findings provide insights into augmenting mHealth adoption among the public by enhancing the perceived benefits of mHealth, helping design more effective and user-friendly mHealth tools, and capitalizing on social normative influence to adopt mHealth. This study utilized the constructs of the UTAUT model to determine the intention to use mHealth. Future research should focus on other health- and technology-related theories to ascertain other possible factors influencing the behavioral intent of mHealth adoption.

Highlights

  • BackgroundOver the past decades, health care systems in most countries around the world have experienced tremendous changes because of the rapid advancement in information and communications technology (ICT)

  • This study developed an integrative model, where a health-related disposition, Mobile health (mHealth)-related beliefs, and normative pressure were combined to explain the underlying mechanism of the behavioral intent to adopt mHealth

  • The results showed that the intention to adopt mHealth is mediated by the influence of UTAUT factors, while health locus of control (HLOC) has no direct effect on adoption intention

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Summary

Introduction

BackgroundOver the past decades, health care systems in most countries around the world have experienced tremendous changes because of the rapid advancement in information and communications technology (ICT). Mobile health (mHealth), as an innovative form of ICT, is one of the most prominent services with remarkable effects on the development of the health care system [1]. MHealth has the potential to enhance the quality of health care systems by improving communication, efficiency, treatment adherence, and health/disease management; reducing costs; and increasing access to interventions and health services [3,4,5,6]. As Malaysia has a high smartphone usage (78% in 2018 [10]), mHealth adoption in the country can be a new and effective approach to empower people in health management and transform the attitude toward health care from reactive to proactive [11]. Mobile health (mHealth) as an innovative form of information and communications technology can efficiently deliver high-quality health care by enhancing communication and health management, reducing costs, and increasing access to health services. Little is known about the underlying mechanism of this association

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