Effects of using a computer in a doctor's office on patient attitudes toward using computerized prompts in routine care.
Christopher N. SciamannaScott P. NovakBess H. MarcusPublished in: Int. J. Medical Informatics (2005)
Keyphrases
- attitudes toward
- student achievement
- computer technology
- statistically significant
- computer usage
- survey instrument
- control group
- cognitive style
- experimental group
- dependent variables
- pretest posttest
- medical knowledge
- computer skills
- college students
- high school
- medical care
- computer lab
- home care
- patient care
- college level
- computer anxiety
- computer assisted language learning
- computer literacy
- perceived usefulness
- gender differences
- care delivery
- patient data
- student learning
- health care
- computer systems
- computer software
- learning processes
- language learning
- learning algorithm