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Introduction: Promises and Perils of eHealth; Timothy M. Hale, Wen-Ying Sylvia Chou, Shelia R. Cotten Chapter 1. "I Went Home to Google”: How Users Assess the Credibility of Online Health Information; Erin Klawitter and Eszter Hargittai Chapter 2. Trust in Health Information Sources and Channels, Then and Now: Evidence from the Health Information National Trends Survey (2005-2013); Chan L. Thai, Anna Gaysynsky, Angela Falisi, Wen-Ying Sylvia Chou, Kelly Blake, and Bradford W. Hesse Chapter 3. Health-Related Information Seeking among Deaf Adults: Findings from the 2017 Health Information National Trends Survey in American Sign Language (HINTS-ASL); Poorna Kushalnagar and Raja Kushalnagar Chapter 4. The Impact of Health Practitioners’ Use of Communication Technologies on Temporal Capital and Autonomy; Cynthia Wang Chapter 5. Tracking Health and Fitness: A Cultural Examination of Self Quantification, Biomedicalization and Gender; Amy A. Ross Chapter 6. The Third Digital Divide in the Health Domain: Is Internet Use for Health Purposes Associated with Health Benefits?; Efrat Neter, Esther Brainin, and Orna Baron-Epel Chapter 7. Who is Likely to Benefit Most from Online Cancer Support Communities? The Role of Personality Traits; Yuchen Ren and An Xiaojing Chapter 8. Positive Impacts of Online Health Information Seeking on Health Perceptions and the Mediational Relationship with Health Communication and Sense of Empowerment; Gül Seçkin, Susan Hughes, Cassie Hudson, David Laljer and Dale Yeatts Chapter 9. Developing a Graphic Text Messaging Intervention for Smoking Cessation Targeting First-Generation Chinese Immigrant Men: Insights from Focus Group Interviews; Emily B. Peterson, Xiaoquan Zhao, Xiaomei Cai and Kyeung Mi Oh Chapter 10. Using Social Media to Help Lesbian, Gay, and Bisexual Young Adults Quit Smoking: An In-depth Interview Study; Ashley Sanders-Jackson, Christopher Clemens and Kristen Wozniak
Contributors from medical fields and from communications and media explore the role and impact of the Internet and other technologies on health communications across a broad range of contexts. Among their topics are trust in health information sources and channels then and now: evidence from the Health Information National Trends Survey 2005-13, the impact of health practitioners' use of communication technologies on temporal capital and autonomy, the third digital divide in the health domain: whether Internet use for health purposes is associated with health benefits, who is likely to benefit most from online cancer support communities: the role of personality traits, and developing a graphic text messaging intervention for smoking cessation targeting first-generation Chinese immigrant men: insights from focus group interviews.