Assessing Self-Help Orientation Among German Rehabilitation Clinics: Website Content Analysis
Elâ Ziegler, Thea Bartzsch, Sabine Bütow, Alf Trojan, Ines Krahn, Daniel Lüdecke, Nicole Usko, Christopher Kofahl

TL;DR
This study analyzed German rehabilitation clinic websites to assess how well they promote self-help, finding that most have low self-help orientation despite its importance in patient-centered care.
Contribution
The study introduces a new 16-criteria coding instrument to measure self-help orientation on clinic websites and is the first to analyze this aspect in German rehabilitation clinics.
Findings
61% of clinics scored low on self-help orientation, with 41.8% showing none at all.
Oncology, neurology, and addiction clinics were more likely to have higher self-help orientation scores.
Facility size, sponsorship, and number of indication areas did not significantly affect self-help orientation.
Abstract
Patient-centeredness has become a guiding principle of delivering quality health care. Integrating self-help services in health care facilities through collaboration is a vital part of this, specifically in rehabilitation. Despite increasing efforts to promote cooperation between rehabilitation clinics and self-help groups and organizations in Germany, implementation remains inconsistent, and research on this is particularly limited. This study sought to examine the “self-help friendliness” (SHF) of rehabilitation clinics, considering the significance of self-help in their internet presence as a central source of patient information. The research objectives are thus to measure and compare the self-help orientation among rehabilitation clinics’ websites as an indicator of SHF to assess which clinic criteria are associated with self-help presentation on the clinic websites. A…
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Taxonomy
TopicsDigital Mental Health Interventions · Stroke Rehabilitation and Recovery · Mental Health and Patient Involvement
