Patients Perception on the Use of Modern Technology to Herbal Prescription in Nigeria

Authors

  • S.A.O. Ogirima Dept. of Information Systems, Ladoke Akintola University of Technology, Ogbomoso, Nigeria

Keywords:

Patient’s perception, modern technology, herbal medicine, Prescription, healthcare delivery

Abstract

The study is to exploring patient’s perception on the use of modern technology for herbal healthcare delivery provided by herbal practitioners in Nigeria. A comprehensive survey was conducted in some selected States in Nigeria to know the opinion of patients towards the application of modern technology for healthcare services. A quantitative questionnaire was set up to know the patients’’ perceptions on the satisfaction derived from the use of the technology. The study was conducted in Western and North-Central Nigeria. The hypothesis derivative crouch coefficient ranges between 0.71 and 0.81 validity and reliability of the system. The majority (68%) prefer the use of modern technology application in terms of improving in their health needs. Some have reservations about the technical reliability, privacy, practice expenses, cost of pay their diagnosis, time, trust, skill, and diagnostic accuracy of diagnosis. In conclusion, the majority of patients agreed and supports the concept of the modern technology and its integration into the current herbal practitioner’s practice.

 

References

S.A.O. Ogirima., S.O. Olabiyisi, E.O., Omidiora, and T.M. Fagbola, “Usage Assessment of Electronic Prescribing Application Deployment Platforms”. Journal of Computations & Modelling, vol.3 issue 2, pp. 21-34, 2013.

S.A.O. Ogirima., “Collaborative and Adaptive Framework for Telediagnosis and Prescription in Herbal Medicine.”, A PhD Thesis in Partial fulfilment of the requirement for the award of Doctor of Philosophy (PhD) Degree in Computer Science, Department of Computer Science and Engineering, Ladoke Akintola University of Technology, Ogbomoso, Nigeria pp. 1-227, 2018.

A. Setyono, A. Jahangir, and C. Eswaran, “Mobile telemedicine system application for telediagnosis using multimedia messaging service technology”. International Journal of Wireless and Mobile Computing, vol. 7 issue 4, 2014.

V. Stanford, “Using pervasive computing to deliver elder care”, IEEE Pervasive Computing, vol. 1 issue 1, pp. 10–13, 2003.

S. Jing,, E. Ergin, and L. Heping, “Expanding Role of Telephone Systems in Reshaping Medical Practice and Care with Health Information Systems”, 1st Edition (2016).

C.H.C. Vincent, H.K.Y. Benjamin, L.M.Y. Ellen, L. Siya, S.T.H. Robin, W.S.S. Regina., W.N.L Albert., C.Y.W Justin., and Y.S.W. Samuel, “Patient Perceptions of Expression of Empathy from Chinese Medicine Clinicians in a Chinese Population (A Cross-Sectional Study)”. Copyright 2016 Wolters Kluwer Health, Inc. All rights reserved (2016).

X. Zhang, “WHO Guidelines on developing consumer information on proper use of traditional complementary and alternative medicines, (2004).

WHO, “Traditional medicine strategy 2002-1005”, Document WHO/ EDM/ TRM/2002.1. pp 1-85, 2002.

W.S. Okonkwo, Nigeria Ethnomedicine. Ibadan University Press Nigeria, (2002).

S.A.O. Ogirima, S.O. Olabiyisi, E.O. Omidiora, O.O. Okediran, and T.R. Awode, “Web-based and Mobile Oriented Herbal Information System in Nigeria”, International Journal of Computer Information Systems and Industrial Management Applications. ISSN 2150-7988 Vol. 6, pp. 535-548 , 2014.

S.A.O. Ogirima, A.O, Afolabi, and A.A Baale, “Collaborative and Adaptive Framework for Telediagnosis and Prescriptions in Herbal Medicine”, Computer Reviews Journal Vol 3 pp. 39–53, 2019.

M. Estai, E. Kruger, and M. Tennant, "Perceptions of Australian dental practitioners about using telemedicine in dental practice", British Dental Journal, 2016

Downloads

Published

2021-02-28

How to Cite

[1]
S. Ogirima, “Patients Perception on the Use of Modern Technology to Herbal Prescription in Nigeria”, Int. J. Sci. Res. Comp. Sci. Eng., vol. 9, no. 1, pp. 72–77, Feb. 2021.

Issue

Section

Research Article

Similar Articles

1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 > >> 

You may also start an advanced similarity search for this article.