4.5 Article

Different Roles of Telehealth and Telemedicine on Medical Tourism: An Empirical Study from Azerbaijan

Journal

HEALTHCARE
Volume 9, Issue 8, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/healthcare9081073

Keywords

medical tourism; user satisfaction; healthcare telecommunication system; internet healthcare services; medical travel intentions

Funding

  1. National Natural Science Foundation of China (NSFC) [71771077, 72071063, 62111530056]
  2. Fundamental Research Funds for the central universities [PA2020GDKC0020]
  3. Anhui Provincial Key Research and Development Plan [202004h07020016]

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This study examines the impact of telehealth and telemedicine on patient satisfaction and willingness to travel in the context of medical tourism. Through an empirical study in Azerbaijan, results show that communication quality and information quality have positive influences on medical travel willingness. The study also highlights the importance of understanding the differences between telehealth and telemedicine in relation to medical tourism.
With the rapid progress in mobile healthcare and Internet medicine, the impact of telehealth and telemedicine on the satisfaction of patients and their willingness to travel has become a focus of the academic research community. This study analyses the differences between telehealth and telemedicine and their role in medical tourism. We examine how the information quality and communication quality of telehealth and telemedicine influence patient satisfaction, and their effects on patients' willingness to undertake medical travel and on their medical travel behaviours. We conducted an empirical study on the use of telehealth and telemedicine and on medical travel behaviour in Azerbaijan using a survey for data collection. A total of 500 results were collected and analysed using SmartPLS 3.0. Results show that (1) the communication quality and information quality of telehealth and telemedicine and their effects on satisfaction have significantly positive influences on willingness to undertake medical travel; (2) the psychological expectations of value and cost (perceived value and perceived cost) have a positive influence on medical travel; and (3) willingness to participate in medical travel positively influences medical travel behaviour. Moreover, results of this study have implications for research on, and the practice of, using telehealth and telemedicine as they relate to medical tourism. This research may help improve knowledge about telehealth and telemedicine and understand the differences between them in detail. This empirical research model may also be useful for researchers from other countries who wish to measure medical travel behaviour.

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