E-Health Initiative and Customer's Expectation: Case Brunei
Mohammad Nabil Almunawar, Zaw Wint, Patrick Kim Cheng Low, Muhammad, Anshari

TL;DR
This study assesses public expectations for e-health services in Brunei, revealing high demand and support for digital healthcare improvements to enhance health literacy, quality, and efficiency.
Contribution
It identifies key public expectations and provides empirical data to guide policy and system development for e-health in Brunei.
Findings
High public demand for e-health services
Strong support for digital healthcare capabilities
Provides foundational data for e-health system development
Abstract
This paper is to determine the dimension of e-health services in Brunei Darussalam (Brunei) from customers' perspective. It is to identify, understand, analyze and evaluate public's expectation on e-health in Brunei. A questionnaire was designed to gather quantitative and qualitative data to survey patients, patient's family, and health practitioners at hospitals, clinics, or home care centers in Brunei starting from February to March, 2011. A 25-item Likert-type survey instrument was specifically developed for this study and administered to a sample of 366 patients. The data were analyzed to provide initial ideas and recommendation to policy makers on how to move forward with the e-health initiative as a mean to improve healthcare services. The survey revealed that there exists a high demand and expectation from people in Brunei to have better healthcare services accessible through an…
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Taxonomy
TopicsCustomer Service Quality and Loyalty · Technology Adoption and User Behaviour
