Exploring the Preferences and Behavioral Trends of e-Patients in Psychosomatics Towards Telemedicine During and Post COVID-19 Pandemic: Cross-Sectional Analysis
Moritz Mahling, Alexander McQueeney, Teresa Festl-Wietek, Ken Masters, Stephan Zipfel, Anne Herrmann-Werner, Caroline Rometsch

TL;DR
The study examines how psychosomatic patients used telemedicine during and after the pandemic, finding that younger and male patients preferred online consultations.
Contribution
Identifies predictors of telemedicine preferences among psychosomatic patients, highlighting age and gender differences.
Findings
Older adults and female patients preferred on-site consultations, while male patients showed openness to online options.
Age and gender were significant predictors of future consultation preferences.
Resilience in communication behaviors was observed despite increased use of online tools.
Abstract
COVID-19 accelerated the adoption of health services, with a growing number of psychosomatic patients turning to the internet for health-related decisions. This study explored changes in communication behavior, information-seeking habits, and post-pandemic consultation preferences among psychosomatic patients during and after COVID-19. This study explored changes in communication behavior, information-seeking habits, and post-pandemic consultation preferences among psychosomatic patients during and after COVID-19. In a cross-sectional study, 150 adult patients (>18 y) from the psychosomatic outpatient department in Tübingen, Germany, were invited to complete an ad hoc questionnaire to identify e-patients’ preferences related to communication, information-seeking behavior, subjective explanations, and postpandemic preferences. Group comparisons and multiple linear regression analyses…
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Taxonomy
TopicsTelemedicine and Telehealth Implementation · Digital Mental Health Interventions · Mobile Health and mHealth Applications
