eHealth literacy and digital health interventions: Key ingredients for supporting the mental health of displaced youth living in the urban slums of kampala, Uganda

IF 9 1区 心理学 Q1 PSYCHOLOGY, EXPERIMENTAL Computers in Human Behavior Pub Date : 2024-09-04 DOI:10.1016/j.chb.2024.108434
Moses Okumu , Carmen H. Logie , William Byansi , Flora Cohen , Thabani Nyoni , Catherine N. Nafula , Robert Hakiza , Joshua Muzei , Jamal Appiah-Kubi , Bernice Adjabeng , Peter Kyambadde
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Abstract

During and after displacement, many displaced youth face increased vulnerability to poor mental health and can encounter inaccurate or confusing health information. Digital tools create new opportunities to reach more of these youth with mental health interventions. Yet maximizing these tools' effectiveness among displaced youth requires understanding their eHealth literacy (eHEALS; i.e., the ability to find, understand, and appraise health information from electronic sources and apply this knowledge to a health problem). Thus, we conducted a community-based cross-sectional survey of 445 displaced youth (16–24 years) living in the slums of Kampala, Uganda to measure their eHEALS and its association with psychosocial wellbeing. Exploratory and confirmatory factor analysis identified a unidimensional measure of eHEALS. Structural equation modeling results indicated that eHEALS was not directly associated with depressive symptoms (β = .08, p = 0.15), but was significantly positively associated with resilience (β = .32, p < 0.001). Resilience was, in turn, significantly negatively associated with depressive symptoms (β = −.21, p < 0.001). The Sobel test for indirect effects confirmed that eHEALS indirectly negatively affected depressive symptoms through resilience (i.e., βindirect effect = −.07, p = 0.004). Our findings highlight the need for interventionists to develop contextualized eHealth interventions that facilitate displaced youth's ability to access, understand, and use health information to the best of their ability and optimally benefit from services.
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电子保健扫盲和数字保健干预:支持乌干达坎帕拉城市贫民区流离失所青年心理健康的关键因素
在流离失所期间和之后,许多流离失所的青年更容易出现心理健康问题,并可能遇到不准确或混乱的健康信息。数字工具创造了新的机会,可以向更多的这些青年提供心理健康干预。然而,要最大限度地发挥这些工具在流离失所青年中的作用,就必须了解他们的电子健康素养(eHEALS;即从电子资源中查找、理解和评估健康信息,并将这些知识应用于健康问题的能力)。因此,我们对居住在乌干达坎帕拉贫民窟的 445 名流离失所青年(16-24 岁)进行了社区横断面调查,以测量他们的电子健康素养及其与社会心理健康的关系。探索性和确认性因素分析确定了一种单维度的 eHEALS 测量方法。结构方程建模结果表明,eHEALS 与抑郁症状没有直接联系(β = .08,p = 0.15),但与复原力有显著正相关(β = .32,p < 0.001)。反过来,复原力与抑郁症状呈显著负相关(β = -.21, p <0.001)。索贝尔间接效应检验证实,eHEALS 通过复原力间接地对抑郁症状产生了负面影响(即,β 间接效应 = -.07, p = 0.004)。我们的研究结果突出表明,干预人员有必要根据具体情况制定电子健康干预措施,以促进流离失所青年尽其所能地获取、理解和使用健康信息,并从服务中获得最佳效益。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
19.10
自引率
4.00%
发文量
381
审稿时长
40 days
期刊介绍: Computers in Human Behavior is a scholarly journal that explores the psychological aspects of computer use. It covers original theoretical works, research reports, literature reviews, and software and book reviews. The journal examines both the use of computers in psychology, psychiatry, and related fields, and the psychological impact of computer use on individuals, groups, and society. Articles discuss topics such as professional practice, training, research, human development, learning, cognition, personality, and social interactions. It focuses on human interactions with computers, considering the computer as a medium through which human behaviors are shaped and expressed. Professionals interested in the psychological aspects of computer use will find this journal valuable, even with limited knowledge of computers.
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