| Literature DB >> 35315779 |
Xiaoyan Hou1, Tailai Wu1, Zhuo Chen2,3, Liqin Zhou1.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Medical crowdfunding provides opportunities for individuals who lack financial resources to access the health services that they need. Despite the popularity of medical crowdfunding, the current understanding of the success of medical crowdfunding campaigns is fragmented and inadequate.Entities:
Keywords: crowdfunding; financial resources; fundraising; health care; medical crowdfunding; methodology; preconceptions; success factor; systematic review; theories
Mesh:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35315779 PMCID: PMC8984822 DOI: 10.2196/30189
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Med Internet Res ISSN: 1438-8871 Impact factor: 7.076
Figure 1Summary of literature search and study selection process.
Study information.
| Reference | Publication date (year, month) | Country | Study aim | Data sources | Method | Success factors |
| Durand et al [ | 2018,6 | United States | To identify the factors influencing the success of crowdfunding campaigns | YouCaring | Text analysis, multiple linear analysis, logistic regression analysis | Campaign description length; goal amount; third-person description perspective; cognitive state |
| Kim et al [ | 2018,4 | United States | To investigate how beneficiaries present their situations and how contributors view the information presented | GoFundMe, YouCaring, Fundly | Semistructured interviews | Authenticity |
| van Duynhoven et al [ | 2019,6 | Canada | To explore the role of socioeconomic status in medical crowdfunding campaigns | Cancer-related activities published by Canadians; The 2016 Census Profile for aggregate dissemination area and area boundaries; forward sortation area boundaries | Exploratory spatial analysis | Socioeconomic status; demographic |
| Xu and Wang [ | 2019,8 | China | Make clear the narrative strategy of medical crowdfunding article | Easy Fundraising | Thematic narrative analysis | Narrative strategies |
| Kim et al [ | 2016,5 | United States | To assess the credibility of web-based medical crowdfunding campaigns | (1) Comment on Reddit related to the medical crowdfunding campaign, (2) 20 participants | Text analysis and semistructured interviews | Credibility; individual prestige |
| Aleksina et al [ | 2019,7 | France | To investigate the determinants of successful crowdfunding campaigns in medical research | Consano, Experiment | Ordinary least square regression | Number of tweeters; goal amount; platform availability; total campaign number; total fundraising amount; total donor number |
| Holmes et al [ | 2019,4 | United Kingdom | To determine whether crowdfunding of pharmacy-related products through popular web-based platforms | Kickstarter, Indiegogo | Text analysis | Media attention; platform audit; demographic information of donors |
| Snyder et al [ | 2017,6 | Canada | To explore how Canadians can demonstrate to others that they should fund their health needs | FundRazr, Generosity, GoFundMe, YouCaring | Text analysis | Personal connections; depth of need; giving back; ethics |
| Koole et al [ | 2018,12 | Netherlands | Identify key factors for the success of crowdfunding for grown-up congenital heart patients | A web-based donation platform | Text analysis | Professional organization support; stakeholder support; easy-to-understand message |
| Barcelos and Budge [ | 2019,1 | United States | Investigated how transgender communities utilize crowdfunding expenses related to gender affirming medical care | GoFundMe | Hierarchical multiple regression analyses | Social media (Facebook) sharing; demographic information of raiser (age, location, race, identity) |
| Berliner et al [ | 2017,8 | United States | Explore the usage, impacts, or consequences of the increasing reliance on crowdfunding for health | GoFundMe | Text analysis | Medical literacy; media literacy |
| Bassani et al [ | 2019,8 | Italy | Examine the worldwide population of health care crowdfunding platforms and explore the relationship between health care crowdfunding success and national health systems | 76 crowdfunding platforms that host health care campaigns | Negative binomial regressions | Platform type; social return |
| Kenworthy [ | 2019,11 | Norway | Map and document how medical crowdfunding is shaped by, and shapes, health disparities | An ethnography of US medical crowd-funding; a study of global health crowdfunding; a project of US medical crowdfunding campaigns | Exploratory conceptual and empirical analysis | Platform design (Search engine, lists, webpage, etc); Partnership with traditional media; Deservingness; Narratives |
Factors influencing the success of medical crowdfunding campaigns from the platforms.
| Dimensions and factors | Definitions | Functions | Reference | ||||
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| Platform audit | Review of campaigns on crowdfunding platforms | Reviews of campaigns by crowdfunding platforms affect donor decisions. | Holmes et al [ | |||
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| Platform availability | The degree to which the platform is available to users | The availability of the platform affects donor incentives, and thus, campaign funding results. | Aleksina et al [ | |||
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| Platform types | Whether the platform is specialized or general | Platforms with more extensive publicity are more popular than specialized smaller platforms. | Bassani et al [ | |||
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| Platform design | Design elements of the platform including search engine, lists, webpage, etc | Platform design determines donors’ experiences, and consequently, their donation behavior. | Kenworthy [ | |||
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| Total campaign number | Total number of campaigns initiated in the platform | With more categories and projects, more potential donors visit the platform. | Aleksina et al [ | |||
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| Total fundraising amount | Total money raised in the platform | Higher total amounts raised on the platform represent higher recognition and acceptance of the platform. | Aleksina et al [ | |||
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| Total donor number | Total number of donors appears in the platform | With more donors in the platform, there is a better possibility of getting funding. | Aleksina et al [ | |||
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| Partnership with traditional media | Platform collaboration with traditional media to disseminate the information of its campaigns | Traditional media can help medical crowdfunding campaigns get more donors. | Kenworthy [ | |||
Factors influencing the success of medical crowdfunding campaigns from the raisers.
| Dimensions and factors | Definitions | Functions | Sources | ||||
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| Age | Age | Younger people are more likely to succeed in health crowdfunding. | Aleksina et al [ | |||
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| Education level | Level of education | Raisers with higher levels of education are more likely to attract the attention of donors (higher donation possibility). | van Duynhoven et al [ | |||
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| Income | Income | Raisers with higher income are more likely to attract the attention of donors (higher donation possibility). | van Duynhoven et al [ | |||
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| Geographical location | Where raisers reside | Raisers are more likely to get help from people in or near their districts, especially in wealthier places. | Barcelos and Budge [ | |||
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| Media literacy | Raisers’ ability to make use of different media | The raisers of successful crowdfunding campaigns have good media literacy. | Berliner and Kenworthy [ | |||
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| Medical literacy | Raisers’ ability of leverage different medical knowledge | A certain level of medical literacy (of raisers) facilitates the proper description of the disease and relevant understanding of the health care system. | Berliner et al [ | |||
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| Deservingness | The degree to which raisers are thought to be deserving of receiving donations | Once raisers are perceived to be deserving, their campaigns attract many donors, and they succeed in raising funds. | Kenworthy [ | |||
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| Personal connections | Raisers’ personal connections with others including their families, friends, and colleagues | The scale of raisers’ personal connections has a positive effect on the success rate of fundraising. | Snyder et al [ | |||
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| Stakeholder and professional organization support | Raisers get support from different stakeholders and professional organizations | The support from stakeholders and professional organizations makes fundraising easier. | Koole et al [ | |||
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| Individual | Raisers’ personal respect and admiration from others inside and outside the platform | The prestige of raisers can serve as the signal of the credibility and success of their campaigns. | Kim et al [ | |||
Factors influencing the success of medical crowdfunding campaigns from donors.
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| Age | Age | Younger donors have higher willingness to donate. | Holmes et al [ | |||
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| Education level | Level of education | Donors with higher levels of education have higher willingness to donate. | Holmes et al [ | |||
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| Income | Income | Donors with higher income have higher willingness to donate. | Holmes et al [ | |||
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| Geographical location | Where raisers reside | Donors are more willing to contribute to crowdfunding campaigns in or near their own regions. | Aleksina et al [ | |||
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| Cognitive state | The cognitive state of the donor when they read the campaign | Donors may feel threatened by negative campaign descriptions and social pressure to donate. The positive cognitive state invoked by the campaign description would promote donors’ donation behavior. | Durand et al [ | |||
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| Social returns | The intrinsic motivation of donors to give back to society | The more returns to the society from the donation, the more possibility donors would donate. | Bassani et al [ | |||
Factors influencing the success of medical crowdfunding campaigns from campaigns.
| Dimensions and factors | Definitions | Functions | Sources | |
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| Goal amount | The objective amount of money the campaign plan to raise. | Goal amount has a positive impact on campaign success. | Durand et al [ | |
| Campaign description length | The length of the medical crowdfunding campaign description. | Campaign description length has a positive impact on campaign success. | Durand et al [ | |
| Third-person description perspective | The narrative perspective of the campaign is the third person. | The third-person perspective makes the story more objective and realistic, which makes it more convincing. | Durand et al [ | |
| Social media sharing | The number of shares and likes of campaigns in social media which connect to the platform. | The more shares and likes potential donors see, the more likely they are to donate. | Barcelos and Budge [ | |
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| Narrative strategy | The way that raisers describe their illness and ask for donations. | Narrative strategies such as more positive emotions, more information, and appropriate arousal level have impacts on crowdfunding success. | Durand et al [ | |
| Authenticity | The content of medical crowdfunding campaigns is authentic. | Potential donors payed attention on their impression of raisers’ authentic medical conditions and make their decisions based on it. | Kim et al [ | |
| Credibility | Credibility of medical crowdfunding campaigns. | Credibility of campaigns which could be formed based collective endorsement have impacts on the success of medical crowdfunding campaigns. | van Duynhoven et al [ | |
| Easy-to understand message | The degree to which the message is easily understood. | Easy-to-understand information helps potential donors get a sense of the raisers’ intention, which in turn helps donors make decisions. | Koole et al [ | |
| Giving back | Portraying the raisers as someone who selflessly gives back to society. | The past efforts of the raisers on behalf of others were used as a rationale for the potential donors to contribute to the crowdfunding campaign. | Snyder et al [ | |
| Deep of need | Campaign content reflects the urgent need of funds to solve health problems. | The urgency of need for help would determine the success of raising money. | Snyder et al [ | |