社交媒体与黑人孕产妇健康:健康素养和电子健康素养的作用。

Nerissa George, Simone Reynolds, Rachel de Long, Marilyn Kacica, Rukhsana Ahmed, Jennifer Manganello
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引用次数: 1

摘要

背景:黑人妇女的产妇死亡率和发病率高于白人妇女。虽然造成这种差距的原因有很多,但向这一人群提供更多更好的孕产妇保健信息可能是有益的。社交媒体提供了一种方便快速地传播信息的方式,使黑人妇女能够在怀孕期间获得健康知识。目的:本研究旨在确定社交媒体的使用模式,以确定黑人妇女用来获取怀孕信息的来源,并探讨健康素养/电子健康素养是否影响这些模式。方法:这个横断面,全国代表性的调查小组包括404名黑人妇女。健康素养通过单项素养筛选器测量,eHEALS用于测量电子健康素养。我们调查了参与者的社交媒体活动、社交媒体使用情况、社交媒体使用情况以及与怀孕有关的健康信息分享情况。评估了健康素养、电子健康素养和社交媒体使用之间的关系。主要结果:总体而言,67.5%的参与者具有较高的健康素养,平均电子健康素养得分较高(34.5分)。据报道,大多数女性(71.6%)使用三个以上的社交媒体账户作为获取怀孕信息的来源。健康素养较低的妇女在社交媒体上搜索一般和特定的怀孕健康信息,报告在怀孕期间更多地使用社交媒体(p < .001),更多地使用社交媒体给予和获得支持(p = .003)。电子健康素养较高的女性更有可能报告更多的社交媒体使用(r = 0.107, p = 0.039),并且经常使用社交媒体给予和获得支持(r = 0.197, p = 0.0001)。健康知识水平高的妇女更常与护士(χ2 = 7.068, p = 0.029)、助产师(χ2 = 6.878, p = 0.032)和分娩教育者(χ2 = 10.289, p = 0.006)分享她们在社交媒体上发现的怀孕信息。报告电子健康素养较高的妇女还报告说,她们更经常与医生(r = 0.115, p = 0.030)、护士(r = 0.139, p = 0.001)、同事(r = 0.160, p = 0.004)以及家人或朋友(r = 0.201, p = 0.0001)分享在社交媒体上发现的怀孕信息。结论:大量黑人妇女使用社交媒体查找妊娠健康信息。未来的研究应该引出更详细的信息,关于黑人妇女为什么和如何使用社交媒体获得怀孕信息和支持,以及健康素养和电子健康素养可能对分娩结果产生的作用。[j].健康素养研究与实践[j].中国卫生科学,2013;7(3):e119-e129。
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Social Media and Black Maternal Health: The Role of Health Literacy and eHealth Literacy.

Background: Black women experience greater maternal mortality and morbidity than White women. Although there are many causes of this disparity, providing more and better maternal health information to this population may be beneficial. Social media offers a way to easily and quickly disseminate information to empower and educate Black women about health during pregnancy.

Objective: This study sought to identify social media use patterns to determine what sources Black women used to obtain information about pregnancy and to explore whether health literacy/eHealth literacy influence those patterns.

Methods: This cross-sectional, nationally representative survey panel included 404 Black women. Health literacy was measured by the Single Item Literacy Screener, and eHEALS was used to measure eHealth literacy. We examined participants' social media activity, social media use, social media use for support, and sharing of pregnancy-related health information. Relationships between health literacy, eHealth literacy, and social media use were assessed.

Key results: Overall, 67.5% of participants had high health literacy, and the average eHealth literacy score was high (34.5). Most women (71.6%) reported using more than three social media accounts as a source for pregnancy information. Women with low health literacy searched social media for general and specific pregnancy health information, reported more social media use during pregnancy in general (p < .001), and more use of social media for giving and getting support (p = .003). Women with higher eHealth literacy were more likely to report more social media use (r = 0.107, p = .039) and often used social media to give and get support (r = 0.197, p = .0001). Women with high health literacy more often reported sharing the pregnancy information they found on social media with their nurse (χ2 = 7.068, p = .029), doula (χ2 = 6.878, p = .032), and childbirth educator (χ2 = 10.289, p = .006). Women who reported higher eHealth literacy also reported more often sharing the pregnancy information they found on social media with their doctor (r = 0.115, p = .030), nurse (r = 0.139, p = .001), coworkers (r = 0.160, p = .004), and family or friends (r = 0.201, p = .0001).

Conclusion: Substantial numbers of Black women use social media to find pregnancy health information. Future studies should elicit more detailed information on why and how Black women use social media to obtain pregnancy information and support as well as what role health literacy and eHealth literacy may have on birth outcomes. [HLRP: Health Literacy Research and Practice. 2023;7(3):e119-e129.].

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来源期刊
Health literacy research and practice
Health literacy research and practice Medicine-Medicine (all)
CiteScore
4.90
自引率
0.00%
发文量
37
审稿时长
36 weeks
期刊最新文献
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