The ‘Why’ Behind the Lie: Towards a Better Understanding of Health Information Disclosure in the Patient-Provider Interaction

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2024-01-03

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3729

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In recognizing the prevalence and adverse outcomes of patients withholding health information from physicians—including medical errors, misdiagnoses, and economic burdens—we draw attention to the need for an enhanced understanding of this behavior. The paper offers an overview of the existing antecedents-privacy concerns-outcomes (APCO) model of information disclosure and proposes an adapted model that incorporates construal level theory to account for unique factors within healthcare settings. The new model aims to provide a theoretical contribution by offering a more comprehensive perspective on health information disclosure during physician consultations. Furthermore, it carries practical implications for designing information collection processes, thereby contributing to strategies that reduce patient nondisclosure and its subsequent costs in healthcare.

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Security and Privacy Challenges for Healthcare, apco model, construal level theory, health information disclosure, patient nondisclosure, patient-provider interaction

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10 pages

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Proceedings of the 57th Hawaii International Conference on System Sciences

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Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International

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