Factors influencing the continuance intention of the women’s health WeChat public account: an integrated model of UTAUT2 and HBM

Autor: Hewei Min, Jiaheng Li, Menglei Di, Shuhong Huang, Xinying Sun, Tao Li, Yibo Wu
Jazyk: angličtina
Rok vydání: 2024
Předmět:
Zdroj: Frontiers in Public Health, Vol 12 (2024)
Druh dokumentu: article
ISSN: 2296-2565
DOI: 10.3389/fpubh.2024.1348673
Popis: BackgroundWomen’s health WeChat public accounts play a crucial role in enhancing health literacy and fostering the development of healthy behaviors among women by disseminating women’s health knowledge. Improving users’ continuous usage behavior and retention rates for the women’s health WeChat public account is vital for influencing the overall effectiveness of health communication on WeChat.ObjectiveThis study aimed to construct a comprehensive model, delving into the key factors influencing women’s continuance intention of the women’s health public accounts from the perspectives of perceived health threats, individual abilities, and technological perceptions. The goal is to provide valuable insights for enhancing user stickiness and the effectiveness of health communication on WeChat public accounts.MethodAn online survey was conducted among women receiving gynecological care at a certain hospital to gage their willingness for sustained use of the women’s health WeChat public accounts. Through structural equation modeling, the study investigated the influencing factors on women’s sustained intention to use the women’s health WeChat public accounts.ResultsThe study included a total of 853 adult women. Among them, 241 (28.3%) women had followed women’s health official accounts in the past but do not currently follow them, 240 (28.1%) women had followed women’s health official accounts in the past and are still following them, and 372 (43.6%) women had never followed women’s health official accounts. Currently, 240 women are still browsing women’s health public accounts, 52 of whom read women’s health public accounts every day, and most of them read women’s health public accounts for 10–20 min at a time (100, 11.7%). The results of the structural equation model revealed that performance expectancy, social influence, hedonic motivation, habit, and e-health literacy had significantly positive effects on women’s sustained intention to use public accounts (performance expectancy: β = 0.341, p
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