Home > Research > Publications & Outputs > Talking Together
View graph of relations

Talking Together: Consumer Communities and Health Care

Research output: Contribution to Journal/MagazineJournal articlepeer-review

Published

Standard

Talking Together: Consumer Communities and Health Care. / Hogg, Gillian; Laing, Angus Wallace; Newholm, Terry.
In: Advances in Consumer Research, Vol. 31, 2004, p. 67-73.

Research output: Contribution to Journal/MagazineJournal articlepeer-review

Harvard

Hogg, G, Laing, AW & Newholm, T 2004, 'Talking Together: Consumer Communities and Health Care', Advances in Consumer Research, vol. 31, pp. 67-73. <http://www.acrwebsite.org/volumes/8850/volumes/v31/NA-31>

APA

Vancouver

Hogg G, Laing AW, Newholm T. Talking Together: Consumer Communities and Health Care. Advances in Consumer Research. 2004;31:67-73.

Author

Hogg, Gillian ; Laing, Angus Wallace ; Newholm, Terry. / Talking Together : Consumer Communities and Health Care. In: Advances in Consumer Research. 2004 ; Vol. 31. pp. 67-73.

Bibtex

@article{2731765f2eeb40a08dfe796047d745a5,
title = "Talking Together: Consumer Communities and Health Care",
abstract = "Consumer involvement in computer mediated communities (CMCs) is increasing particularly in high involvement services such as healthcare. This paper examines the role of CMCs as providers of patient information and support and the subsequent effect on the relationship between 'informed{\textquoteright} consumers and health care providers. The evolving dialogue between consumers in virtual communities provides one key axis along which professional service consumption will evolve. The challenge for service consumers is to develop frameworks that facilitate robust dialogue and exchange of information and emotional support to complement their rising authority. The parallel challenge is for the established medical profession to recognise the consequences of this evolving dialogue and develop approaches to service delivery that effectively engage with consumers on the basis of this increasing authority.",
author = "Gillian Hogg and Laing, {Angus Wallace} and Terry Newholm",
year = "2004",
language = "English",
volume = "31",
pages = "67--73",
journal = "Advances in Consumer Research",
issn = "0915-5524",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Talking Together

T2 - Consumer Communities and Health Care

AU - Hogg, Gillian

AU - Laing, Angus Wallace

AU - Newholm, Terry

PY - 2004

Y1 - 2004

N2 - Consumer involvement in computer mediated communities (CMCs) is increasing particularly in high involvement services such as healthcare. This paper examines the role of CMCs as providers of patient information and support and the subsequent effect on the relationship between 'informed’ consumers and health care providers. The evolving dialogue between consumers in virtual communities provides one key axis along which professional service consumption will evolve. The challenge for service consumers is to develop frameworks that facilitate robust dialogue and exchange of information and emotional support to complement their rising authority. The parallel challenge is for the established medical profession to recognise the consequences of this evolving dialogue and develop approaches to service delivery that effectively engage with consumers on the basis of this increasing authority.

AB - Consumer involvement in computer mediated communities (CMCs) is increasing particularly in high involvement services such as healthcare. This paper examines the role of CMCs as providers of patient information and support and the subsequent effect on the relationship between 'informed’ consumers and health care providers. The evolving dialogue between consumers in virtual communities provides one key axis along which professional service consumption will evolve. The challenge for service consumers is to develop frameworks that facilitate robust dialogue and exchange of information and emotional support to complement their rising authority. The parallel challenge is for the established medical profession to recognise the consequences of this evolving dialogue and develop approaches to service delivery that effectively engage with consumers on the basis of this increasing authority.

M3 - Journal article

VL - 31

SP - 67

EP - 73

JO - Advances in Consumer Research

JF - Advances in Consumer Research

SN - 0915-5524

ER -