38 research outputs found

    Young people's views on the potential use of telemedicine consultations for sexual health: results of a national survey

    Get PDF
    <p>Abstract</p> <p>Background</p> <p>Young people are disproportionately affected by sexually transmissible infections in Australia but face barriers to accessing sexual health services, including concerns over confidentiality and, for some, geographic remoteness. A possible innovation to increase access to services is the use of telemedicine.</p> <p>Methods</p> <p>Young people's (aged 16-24) pre-use views on telephone and webcam consultations for sexual health were investigated through a widely-advertised national online survey in Australia. Descriptive statistics were used to describe the study sample and chi-square, Mann-Whitney U test, or t-tests were used to assess associations. Multinomial logistic regression was used to explore the association between the three-level outcome variable (first preference in person, telephone or webcam, and demographic and behavioural variables); odds ratios and 95%CI were calculated using in person as the reference category. Free text responses were analysed thematically.</p> <p>Results</p> <p>A total of 662 people completed the questionnaire. Overall, 85% of the sample indicated they would be willing to have an in-person consultation with a doctor, 63% a telephone consultation, and 29% a webcam consultation. Men, respondents with same-sex partners, and respondents reporting three or more partners in the previous year were more willing to have a webcam consultation. Imagining they lived 20 minutes from a doctor, 83% of respondents reported that their first preference would be an in-person consultation with a doctor; if imagining they lived two hours from a doctor, 51% preferred a telephone consultation. The main objections to webcam consultations in the free text responses were privacy and security concerns relating to the possibility of the webcam consultation being recorded, saved, and potentially searchable and retrievable online.</p> <p>Conclusions</p> <p>This study is the first we are aware of that seeks the views of young people on telemedicine and access to sexual health services. Although only 29% of respondents were willing to have a webcam consultation, such a service may benefit youth who may not otherwise access a sexual health service. The acceptability of webcam consultations may be increased if medical clinics provide clear and accessible privacy policies ensuring that consultations will not be recorded or saved.</p

    Toughness and microstructural factors of Ti-6Al-4V alloy

    No full text
    Translated from Japanese (Tetsu-to-Hagane 1986 v. 72(6) p. 99-106)SIGLEAvailable from British Library Document Supply Centre- DSC:9022.0602(BISITS-NF--63)T / BLDSC - British Library Document Supply CentreGBUnited Kingdo

    TRUST: TRust Unguarded Service Terminals

    No full text
    Nowadays, plenty of digital services are provided to citizens by means of terminals located in public unguarded places. In order to access the desired service, users, authenticate themselves by providing their credentials through such terminals. This approach opens up&nbsp;to the problem of fraudulent devices that could be installed in place of regular terminals to capture users' confidential information. Indeed, despite the development of increasingly secure systems aiming at guaranteeing an acceptable security level, users are frequently unable to distinguish between terminals on which security measures are enforced (trusted terminals) and malicious terminals that pretend to be trusted

    Internet shopping and internet banking in sequence: An explanatory case study

    No full text
    Adoption of Internet banking often follows on from usage of Internet shopping, but policies to increase Internet banking use typically ignore this ordering. This article presents a case study that underscores this sequence of Internet service adoption and identifies factors that shape the propensity to use the Internet for shopping and banking. Application of bivariate probit regression techniques to data sourced from a survey of 259 respondents in Athens, Greece, and estimation of marginal effects of the determinants of Internet banking use conditioned on the determinants of Internet shopping use illustrate that ignoring the sequence of Internet service use can lead to incorrect policy recommendations. This article contributes to the literature by theorising the underlying causal mechanisms of Internet banking adoption and presenting supporting evidence via a sequential modelling approach. We find that personal capacity is an important determinant of Internet banking use in a standard, non-sequential approach but it has no significant effect when the model is sequential. Our results suggest that policymakers should emphasise usefulness attributes of Internet banking when attempting to increase Internet banking usage by people who already use the Internet for shopping. © 2013 Macmillan Publishers Ltd
    corecore