What Affects Perceived Trustworthiness of Online Medical Information and Subsequent Treatment Decision Making? Randomized Trials on the Role of Uncertainty and Institutional Cues
Gabriel Recchia, Karin S. Moser, Alexandra L.J. Freeman

TL;DR
This study explores how people's trust in medical information and treatment decisions is influenced by uncertainty cues and institutional logos in online tools.
Contribution
The paper introduces a novel integration of trust, uncertainty, and psychological distance theories to examine how these factors jointly affect trust and decision-making in medical contexts.
Findings
Institutional trust significantly influenced perceived trustworthiness of medical tools and treatment decisions.
Communicating uncertainty had little impact on users' decision-making or perception of tool reliability.
Perceived hypotheticality of scenarios significantly affected participants' responses, suggesting a need for realistic experimental designs.
Abstract
Background. Online, algorithmically driven prognostic tools are increasingly important in medical decision making. Institutions developing such tools need to be able to communicate the precision and accuracy of the information in a trustworthy manner, and so many attempt to communicate uncertainties but also use institutional logos to underscore their trustworthiness. Bringing together theories on trust, uncertainty, and psychological distance in a novel way, we tested whether and how the communication of uncertainty and the presence of institutional logos together affected trust in medical information, the prognostic tool itself, and treatment decisions. Methods. A pilot and 2 online experiments in which UK (experiment 1) and worldwide (experiment 2) participants (Ntotal = 4,724) were randomized to 1 of 12 arms in a 3 (uncertainty cue) × 4 (institutional cue) between-subjects design.…
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Taxonomy
TopicsBehavioral Health and Interventions · Psychology of Moral and Emotional Judgment · Patient-Provider Communication in Healthcare
