TY - JOUR AU - Mark, Erica AU - Sridharan, Mira AU - Florenzo, Brian AU - Schenck, Olivia L AU - Noland, Mary-Margaret B AU - Barbieri, John S AU - Lipoff, Jules B PY - 2022 DA - 2022/4/22 TI -皮肤病学中的众包医疗成本:皮肤病学GoFundMe活动的横断研究分析JO - JMIR Dermatol SP - e34111 VL - 5 IS - 2 KW -众筹KW -众包KW -筹款KW - GoFundMe KW -社交媒体KW -医疗费用KW -财务负担KW -健康权益AB -背景:医疗费用众筹正变得越来越受欢迎。以前的研究很少描述与成功相关的筹资特征和品质。目的:本研究旨在描述和调查与成功的皮肤病筹款人相关的品质。方法:这项针对皮肤病学GoFundMe活动的横断面研究收集了数据,包括人口统计学变量、采用归纳定性方法的主题变量和定量信息。线性回归研究了与成功相关的品质,这些品质是根据控制活动目标时筹集的资金来定义的。使用逻辑回归来检查与非常成功的活动相关的质量,定义为那些提高>1.5倍IQR的活动。P< 0.05有统计学意义。结果:在数据收集时,总共评估了2008年公开可用的运动。与更大成功相关的不可改变因素包括男性性别、20-40岁和白人。 Modifiable factors associated with success included more updates posted to the campaign page, non–self-identity of the campaign creator, mention of a chronic condition, and smiling in campaign profile photographs. Conclusions: Understanding the modifiable factors of medical crowdfunding may inform future campaigns, and nonmodifiable factors may have policy implications for improving health care equity and financing. Crowdfunding for medical disease treatment may have potential implications for medical privacy and exacerbation of existing health care disparities. This study was limited to publicly available GoFundMe campaigns. Potential limitations for this study include intercoder variability, misclassification bias because of the data abstraction process, and prioritization of campaigns based on the proprietary GoFundMe algorithm. SN - 2562-0959 UR - https://derma.www.mybigtv.com/2022/2/e34111 UR - https://doi.org/10.2196/34111 DO - 10.2196/34111 ID - info:doi/10.2196/34111 ER -
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