Population subgroup differences in the use of a COVID-19 chatbot

被引:0
|
作者
Laura C. Schubel
Deliya B. Wesley
Ethan Booker
John Lock
Raj M. Ratwani
机构
[1] MedStar Health National Center for Human Factors in Healthcare,
[2] MedStar Health Research Institute,undefined
[3] MedStar Telehealth Innovation Center,undefined
[4] MedStar Health,undefined
来源
关键词
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
COVID-19 chatbots are widely used to screen for symptoms and disseminate information about the virus, yet little is known about the population subgroups that interact with this technology and the specific features that are used. An analysis of 1,000,740 patients invited to use a COVID-19 chatbot, 69,451 (6.94%) of which agreed to participate, shows differences in chatbot feature use by gender, race, and age. These results can inform future public health COVID-19 symptom screening and information dissemination strategies.
引用
收藏
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [1] Population subgroup differences in the use of a COVID-19 chatbot
    Schubel, Laura C.
    Wesley, Deliya B.
    Booker, Ethan
    Lock, John
    Ratwani, Raj M.
    NPJ DIGITAL MEDICINE, 2021, 4 (01)
  • [2] Chatbot use cases in the Covid-19 public health response
    Amiri, Parham
    Karahanna, Elena
    JOURNAL OF THE AMERICAN MEDICAL INFORMATICS ASSOCIATION, 2022, 29 (05) : 1000 - 1010
  • [3] Multilingual Indian COVID-19 Chatbot
    Thara, S.
    Jyothiratnam
    Sonpole, Satya Harthik
    Inturi, Bhargav
    Krishna, Ajay
    Vuppala, Sahit
    Nedungadi, Prema
    SMART TRENDS IN COMPUTING AND COMMUNICATIONS, VOL 2, SMARTCOM 2024, 2024, 946 : 47 - 64
  • [4] Canakinumab in a subgroup of patients with COVID-19
    Ucciferri, Claudio
    Auricchio, Antonio
    Di Nicola, Marta
    Potere, Nicola
    Abbate, Antonio
    Cipollone, Francesco
    Vecchiet, Jacopo
    Falasca, Katia
    LANCET RHEUMATOLOGY, 2020, 2 (08): : E457 - E458
  • [5] Differences in clinical characteristics of COVID-19 in Hispanic/Latino population
    Weng, Chien-Hsiang
    Saal, Andrew
    Chan, Philip A.
    TRANSBOUNDARY AND EMERGING DISEASES, 2020, 67 (05) : 1756 - 1757
  • [6] Differences in social media use by COVID-19 vaccination status
    Moffett, Kenneth W.
    Seserman, Kate
    Margolis, Katherine A.
    Kranzler, Elissa C.
    Marshall, Michael C.
    Dahlen, Heather
    Kim, Jae-Eun C.
    Denison, Benjamin
    Hoffman, Blake
    Dupervil, Daphney
    Yu, Kathleen
    Hoffman, Leah
    VACCINE, 2024, 42 (09) : 2166 - 2170
  • [7] Gender differences in COVID-19
    Paschou, Stavroula A.
    Psaltopoulou, Theodora
    Halvatsiotis, Panagiotis
    Raptis, Athanasios
    V. Vlachopoulos, Charalambos
    Dimopoulos, Meletios-Athanasios
    MATURITAS, 2022, 161 : 72 - 73
  • [8] Sex Differences and COVID-19
    Thomas, Natalie
    Gurvich, Caroline
    Kulkarni, Jayashri
    IDENTIFCATION OF BIOMARKERS, NEW TREATMENTS, AND VACCINES FOR COVID-19, 2021, 1327 : 79 - 91
  • [9] Population Density and Regional Differences Determine the Probability of COVID-19 Infection
    Karaki, Hideaki
    JOURNAL OF DISASTER RESEARCH, 2022, 17 (01) : 61 - 64
  • [10] Sex differences in response to COVID-19 mRNA vaccines in Italian population
    Ferroni, Eliana
    Mateo-Urdiales, Alberto
    Bietta, Carla
    Cesaroni, Giulia
    Anticoli, Simona
    Di Maggio, Elisa
    Ancona, Angela
    Petrone, Daniele
    Cannone, Andrea
    Sacco, Chiara
    Fabiani, Massimo
    Del Manso, Martina
    Riccardo, Flavia
    Bella, Antonino
    Ruggieri, Anna
    Pezzotti, Patrizio
    EPIDEMIOLOGY & INFECTION, 2024, 152