Investigating physician churn in online health communities from a social influence perspective

Investigating physician churn in online health communities from a social influence perspective
Qin Chen, Jiahua Jin, Tingting Zhang, Xiangbin Yan
Aslib Journal of Information Management, Vol. 76, No. 6, pp.974-995

The success of online health communities (OHCs) depends on maintaining long-term relationships with physicians and preventing churn. Even so, the reasons for physician churn are poorly understood. In this study, an empirical model was proposed from a social influence perspective to explore the effects of online social influence and offline social influence on physician churn, as well as the moderating effect of their online returns.

The empirical data of 4,145 physicians from a Chinese OHC, and probit regression models were employed to verify the proposed theoretical model.

The results suggest that physicians’ churn intention is influenced by online and offline social influences, and the offline social influence is more powerful. Physicians’ reputational and economic returns could weaken the effect of online social influence on churn intention. However, physicians’ economic returns could strengthen the effect of offline social influence on churn intention.

This research study is the first attempt to explore physician churn and divides the social influence into online and offline social influences according to the source of social relationship. The findings contribute to the literature on e-Health, user churn and social influence and provide management implications for OHC managers.

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