Improving Health Information for Rare Disease Patients and Caregivers: A Survey of Preferences for Health Information Seeking Channels and Formats

Q3 Social Sciences Journal of Hospital Librarianship Pub Date : 2023-03-28 DOI:10.1080/15323269.2023.2194808
Ting Wang, Brady D. Lund, M. Dow
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Abstract

ABSTRACT Understanding rare disease patients’ and caregivers’ health information-seeking behavior is essential for creating useful resources. Due to the rarity of the diseases, available information can be scarce and lead to non-traditional, untrustworthy sources. A survey of 136 RASopathies caregivers was conducted via social media. The findings indicate that health information needs pertained to information about specialized medical practitioners and self-care support, while preferred information formats included visual media like images and links to helpful health articles. Caregivers were less interested in physical or print resources related to health and medical conditions when compared to digital resources and social media health information. Parents were more likely to share peer-reviewed or vetted health articles as opposed to media reports and other sources that may be more prone to disseminating fake news or disinformation about rare health conditions. This study has implications both for information professionals and eHealth professionals.
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改善罕见病患者及照护者的健康资讯:对健康资讯寻求渠道及格式的偏好调查
摘要了解罕见病患者和护理人员的健康信息寻求行为对于创建有用的资源至关重要。由于疾病的罕见性,现有信息可能稀缺,并导致非传统、不可信的来源。通过社交媒体对136名RA患者的护理人员进行了调查。研究结果表明,健康信息需求与专业医生和自我护理支持相关,而首选的信息格式包括图像等视觉媒体和有用健康文章的链接。与数字资源和社交媒体健康信息相比,护理人员对与健康和医疗状况相关的实物或印刷资源不太感兴趣。父母更有可能分享经过同行评审或审查的健康文章,而不是媒体报道和其他更容易传播关于罕见健康状况的假新闻或虚假信息的来源。这项研究对信息专业人员和电子健康专业人员都有启示。
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来源期刊
Journal of Hospital Librarianship
Journal of Hospital Librarianship Social Sciences-Library and Information Sciences
CiteScore
1.00
自引率
0.00%
发文量
43
期刊介绍: The Journal of Hospital Librarianship is the first journal to specifically address the issues and concerns of librarians and information specialists in the field of hospital librarianship. This peer-reviewed journal focuses on technical and administrative issues that most concern hospital librarians, providing a forum for those professionals who organize and disseminate health information to both clinical care professionals and consumers. The Journal addresses a wide variety of subjects that are vital to the field, including administrative, technical and program issues that may challenge hospital librarians. Articles published in the Journal focus on research strategies, administrative assistance, managed care, financing, mergers, and more.
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