Advancing African American and hispanic health literacy with a bilingual, personalized, prevention smartphone application.

IF 2.2 3区 医学 Q2 HEALTH CARE SCIENCES & SERVICES Health Informatics Journal Pub Date : 2025-01-01 DOI:10.1177/14604582251315604
Neil Jay Sehgal, Devlon Nicole Jackson, Christine Herlihy, John Dickerson, Cynthia Baur
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Abstract

Many online health information sources are generic and difficult to understand, but consumers want information to be personalized and understandable. Smartphone health applications (apps) offer personalized information to support health goals and reduce preventable chronic conditions. This study aimed to determine how the HealthyMe/MiSalud personalized app (1) engaged English-speaking African American and Spanish-speaking Hispanic adults, and (2) motivated them to set goals and follow preventive recommendations. Our study adds to the literature on digital health, health information seeking, and prevention. We used a multi-method approach, including community and participatory design principles, to learn about potential African American and Hispanic adult health app users and evaluate the app in two usability tests and a 12-month field test. Ninety-six African American and Hispanic adults downloaded the HealthyMe/MiSalud app and used it for a minimum of 36 weeks. We found they wanted personalized information on core prevention topics, and their health histories and goals affected how they rated topic relevance. African American females ages 18-34 were more likely to save an article aligned with family health history, and African American females aged 35-49, males age 50-64, and African American males overall were more likely to save an article aligned with their health goals. Our study revealed that a prevention app with personalized recommendations can support health information seeking and health literacy. These findings can help app developers, public health practitioners, and researchers when designing apps for groups of varying identities.

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通过双语、个性化、预防智能手机应用程序推进非裔美国人和西班牙裔美国人的健康素养。
许多在线健康信息来源是通用的,难以理解,但消费者希望信息是个性化的和可理解的。智能手机健康应用程序(app)提供个性化信息,以支持健康目标和减少可预防的慢性病。本研究旨在确定HealthyMe/MiSalud个性化应用程序如何(1)吸引说英语的非裔美国人和说西班牙语的西班牙裔成年人,以及(2)激励他们设定目标并遵循预防建议。我们的研究增加了关于数字健康、健康信息寻求和预防的文献。我们采用了多种方法,包括社区和参与式设计原则,以了解潜在的非裔美国人和西班牙裔成人健康应用程序用户,并在两次可用性测试和12个月的现场测试中评估该应用程序。96名非裔美国人和西班牙裔成年人下载了HealthyMe/MiSalud应用程序,并使用了至少36周。我们发现他们想要关于核心预防主题的个性化信息,他们的健康史和目标影响了他们对主题相关性的评价。年龄在18-34岁的非裔美国女性更有可能保存与家族健康史相关的文章,年龄在35-49岁的非裔美国女性、年龄在50-64岁的男性和总体上的非裔美国男性更有可能保存与他们的健康目标相关的文章。我们的研究表明,带有个性化建议的预防应用程序可以支持健康信息的搜索和健康素养。这些发现可以帮助应用程序开发者、公共卫生从业者和研究人员为不同身份的群体设计应用程序。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
Health Informatics Journal
Health Informatics Journal HEALTH CARE SCIENCES & SERVICES-MEDICAL INFORMATICS
CiteScore
7.80
自引率
6.70%
发文量
80
审稿时长
6 months
期刊介绍: Health Informatics Journal is an international peer-reviewed journal. All papers submitted to Health Informatics Journal are subject to peer review by members of a carefully appointed editorial board. The journal operates a conventional single-blind reviewing policy in which the reviewer’s name is always concealed from the submitting author.
期刊最新文献
Researching public health datasets in the era of deep learning: a systematic literature review. A blueprint for large language model-augmented telehealth for HIV mitigation in Indonesia: A scoping review of a novel therapeutic modality. Advancing African American and hispanic health literacy with a bilingual, personalized, prevention smartphone application. Evaluating the quality of Spanish-language information for patients with type 2 diabetes on YouTube and Facebook. Pathways to usage intention of mobile health apps among hypertensive patients: A fuzzy-set qualitative comparative analysis.
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