孕期手机应用的使用:澳大利亚孕妇健康信息实践和质量意识调查。

Bonnie R Brammall, Melanie J Hayman, Cheryce L Harrison
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引用次数: 0

摘要

背景:与健康相关的移动应用程序(Apps)具有提高孕期健康知识和促进健康行为的潜力。怀孕应用程序很受欢迎,被消费者广泛使用:本研究调查了孕期移动应用程序的使用模式、决策标准以及对健康相关信息的质量和可信度的关注。本研究旨在了解消费者的观点,以便为包含健康相关信息的应用程序提供指导:设计:横断面研究,采用在线问卷收集数据:该研究通过社交媒体和付费 Facebook 广告等网络平台对澳大利亚的孕妇进行了调查。参与者填写了一份包含 29 个项目的问卷,评估她们对怀孕应用程序的使用、健康信息的来源以及对应用程序质量和安全性的看法,并使用 Qualtrics 平台和 SPSS 统计软件收集和分析数据:共有 427 名年龄在 18 岁或以上、居住在澳大利亚的当前或近期怀孕的个人完成了调查。总体而言,62.3%的人目前怀孕,37.7%的人最近怀孕,怀孕时间在 6 个月以内。医生是怀孕相关健康信息的主要来源,而怀孕应用程序则是第三大最常见的来源。63.8%的受访者认为怀孕应用程序是值得信赖的信息来源,大多数受访者在怀孕期间使用过应用程序(94.2%)。在使用怀孕应用程序的受访者中(n = 325),信息的安全性和可信度是他们选择应用程序时的首要考虑因素。然而,35.5% 的受访者(n=115)曾遇到过他们认为不安全或与之前的知识或建议相冲突的应用程序信息。只有 4.6%(n=15)的人知道,与健康有关的应用程序在提供下载之前没有经过准确信息筛选/质量保证检查。如果有评估应用程序质量的指南,74.6%(n = 241)的人会使用该工具:这些研究结果突出表明,有必要促进对孕期应用程序中的健康信息进行批判性评估,并开发资源支持消费者这样做。
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Pregnancy mobile app use: A survey of health information practices and quality awareness among pregnant women in Australia.

Background: Health-related mobile applications (apps) have the potential to improve health knowledge and promote healthy behaviours during pregnancy. Pregnancy apps are popular and extensively used by consumers.

Objective: This study investigates the usage patterns, decision-making criteria and concerns regarding the quality and credibility of health-related information within pregnancy mobile applications. The aim of this study is to understand consumer perspectives to potentially contribute to guidelines for apps containing health-related information.

Design: A cross-sectional study, utilising an online questionnaire for data collection.

Methods: The study surveyed pregnant women in Australia who were recruited via online platforms, including social media and paid Facebook ads. Participants completed a 29-item questionnaire assessing their use of pregnancy apps, sources of health information and perceptions of app quality and safety, with data collected and analysed using the Qualtrics platform and SPSS Statistics.

Results: The survey was survey completed by 427 current-or-recently pregnant individuals, aged 18 or over and located in Australia. Overall, 62.3% were currently pregnant and 37.7% were recently pregnant, within 6 months. Medical practitioners were the primary source of pregnancy-related health information, and pregnancy apps were the third most common source. Pregnancy apps were considered to be a trustworthy source of information by 63.8% of respondents and the majority used apps during pregnancy (94.2%). Of those who used pregnancy apps (n = 325), information being safe and trustworthy was their top priority when selecting an app. However, 35.5% (n = 115) had encountered information in an app they felt was unsafe or conflicted with previous knowledge or advice. Only 4.6% (n = 15) were aware that health-related apps are not screened for accurate information/undergo quality assurance checks before being made available to download. If provided with a guide to evaluate app quality, 74.6% (n = 241) would utilise the tool.

Conclusions: These findings highlight a need to promote the critical assessment of health information within pregnancy apps and to develop resources to support consumers in doing so.

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