数字健康素养及其与社会人口特征、健康资源使用和健康结果的关系:快速回顾

IF 1.9 Q3 MEDICINE, RESEARCH & EXPERIMENTAL Interactive Journal of Medical Research Pub Date : 2024-07-26 DOI:10.2196/46888
Eva Yuen, Natalie Winter, Feby Savira, Catherine E Huggins, Lemai Nguyen, Paul Cooper, Anna Peeters, Kate Anderson, Rahul Bhoyroo, Sarah Crowe, Anna Ugalde
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引用次数: 0

摘要

背景数字健康素养已成为驾驭数字时代的关键技能:本综述旨在广泛总结有关一般人群、患者群体、家长或护理人员群体中数字健康素养与(1)社会人口特征、(2)健康资源使用以及(3)健康结果之间关系的文献:通过检索 4 个网络数据库,对 2016 年 1 月至 2022 年 5 月间发表的文献进行了快速综述。根据以下关键词纳入文章:"成人群体中的 "测量数字健康素养"、"数字素养"、"电子健康素养"、"电子健康素养 "或 "互联网健康素养";参与者来自以英语为主要语言的国家;研究必须是横断面、纵向、前瞻性或回顾性的,并以英语发表:结果:36 篇文章符合纳入标准。关于数字健康素养与社会人口特征之间关系的证据不尽相同(27/36,75%的纳入研究),教育程度较高(16/21,76.2%的研究考察了这一关系)和年龄较小(12/21,57.1%的研究)往往预示着较高的数字健康素养;然而,其他研究并未发现两者之间的关系。大多数研究未发现性别差异。不同种族群体之间的证据过于有限,无法得出结论;一些研究显示,少数种族和少数民族群体的数字健康素养高于白人,而其他研究则显示两者之间没有关联。在大多数研究(20/36,55.6%)中,较高的数字健康素养与数字健康资源的使用有关。此外,在 17 项探讨这些关系的研究(17/36,47.2%)中,较高的数字健康素养还与 3 个领域(社会心理结果、慢性病和健康管理行为以及身体结果)的健康结果有关。然而,并非所有关于数字健康素养与卫生资源使用和健康结果之间关系的研究都朝着预期的方向发展:综述显示,数字健康素养与社会人口特征之间的关系结果不一,但研究普遍发现,数字健康素养的提高与健康结果和行为的改善呈正相关。有必要进一步调查数字健康素养对慢性疾病结果的影响,尤其是在不同群体中。鉴于新出现的证据表明,数字健康素养较低的人群会从不靠谱的来源获取健康信息,因此赋予个人在数字平台和设备上批判性地获取和评估可靠健康信息的技能至关重要。因此,确定具有成本效益的战略,在社区环境中快速评估和提高数字健康素养能力,值得继续研究。
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Digital Health Literacy and Its Association With Sociodemographic Characteristics, Health Resource Use, and Health Outcomes: Rapid Review.

Background: Digital health literacy has emerged as a critical skill set to navigate the digital age.

Objective: This review sought to broadly summarize the literature on associations between digital health literacy and (1) sociodemographic characteristics, (2) health resource use, and (3) health outcomes in the general population, patient groups, or parent or caregiver groups.

Methods: A rapid review of literature published between January 2016 and May 2022 was conducted through a search of 4 web-based databases. Articles were included on the basis of the following keywords: "measured digital health literacy," "digital literacy," "ehealth literacy," "e-health literacy," "electronic health literacy," or "internet health literacy" in adult populations; participants were from countries where English was the primary language; studies had to be cross-sectional, longitudinal, prospective, or retrospective, and published in English.

Results: Thirty-six articles met the inclusion criteria. Evidence on the associations between digital health literacy and sociodemographic characteristics varied (27/36, 75% included studies), with higher education (16/21, 76.2% studies that examined the association) and younger age (12/21, 57.1% studies) tending to predict higher digital health literacy; however, other studies found no associations. No differences between genders were found across the majority of studies. Evidence across ethnic groups was too limited to draw conclusions; some studies showed that those from racial and ethnic minority groups had higher digital health literacy than White individuals, while other studies showed no associations. Higher digital health literacy was associated with digital health resource use in the majority of studies (20/36, 55.6%) that examined this relationship. In addition, higher digital health literacy was also associated with health outcomes across 3 areas (psychosocial outcomes; chronic disease and health management behaviors; and physical outcomes) across 17 included studies (17/36, 47.2%) that explored these relationships. However, not all studies on the relationship among digital health literacy and health resource use and health outcomes were in the expected direction.

Conclusions: The review presents mixed results regarding the relationship between digital health literacy and sociodemographic characteristics, although studies broadly found that increased digital health literacy was positively associated with improved health outcomes and behaviors. Further investigations of digital health literacy on chronic disease outcomes are needed, particularly across diverse groups. Empowering individuals with the skills to critically access and appraise reliable health information on digital platforms and devices is critical, given emerging evidence that suggests that those with low digital health literacy seek health information from unreliable sources. Identifying cost-effective strategies to rapidly assess and enhance digital health literacy capacities across community settings thus warrants continued investigation.

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来源期刊
Interactive Journal of Medical Research
Interactive Journal of Medical Research MEDICINE, RESEARCH & EXPERIMENTAL-
自引率
0.00%
发文量
45
审稿时长
12 weeks
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