| Literature DB >> 22094891 |
Connie V Chan1, David R Kaufman.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Consumer eHealth interventions are of a growing importance in the individual management of health and health behaviors. However, a range of access, resources, and skills barriers prevent health care consumers from fully engaging in and benefiting from the spectrum of eHealth interventions. Consumers may engage in a range of eHealth tasks, such as participating in health discussion forums and entering information into a personal health record. eHealth literacy names a set of skills and knowledge that are essential for productive interactions with technology-based health tools, such as proficiency in information retrieval strategies, and communicating health concepts effectively.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2011 PMID: 22094891 PMCID: PMC3222196 DOI: 10.2196/jmir.1750
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Med Internet Res ISSN: 1438-8871 Impact factor: 5.428
Documented skill-related challenges to use of common eHealth tools
| eHealth tool | Example of tasks | Examples of skill-related challenges in completing eHealth tasks |
| Health information portals | Looking up information about treatment options for a health condition | Identifying appropriate and reliable sources; assessing quality of information |
Using effective information retrieval strategies [ | ||
Understanding complex technical language | ||
Comprehending materials written above recommended reading levels [ | ||
| Personal health records | Entering personal information into medical record | Having computer skills to effectively use all the different features and tools |
Being familiar with health concepts to enter and extract appropriate information in record [ | ||
| Telemedicine or teleconsultation applications | Communicating with health care providers | Effectively using communication tools |
Interpreting and using health information appropriately for self-care activities [ | ||
| Decision-support tools | Evaluating and weighing evidence to inform a decision | Understanding risk and uncertainty [ |
Obtaining and evaluating evidence-based information | ||
| Online support or chat groups | Participating in discussion forum | Communicating ideas clearly; adhering to online social etiquette and group norms |
Effectively sharing information without compromising one’s privacy [ |
Framework shown as a matrix of literacy types and cognitive complexity levels
| Literacy type | Increasing levels of cognitive complexity (Bloom’s taxonomy) | |||||
| Remembering | Understanding | Applying | Analyzing | Evaluating | Creating | |
| Computer | ||||||
| Information | ||||||
| Media | ||||||
| Reading | ||||||
| Writing | ||||||
| Numeracy | ||||||
| Science | ||||||
| Health | ||||||
Figure 1Process of employing a framework to characterize eHealth demands and barriers.
Figure 2Representation of the aggressive/conservative scale. The rows are as they appear in the actual table on the webpage except for the top row, which is included for clarity.
Application of the framework coding to steps 10–16 of the task
| Step | Skills and knowledge required to complete step | Framework code from CTAa |
| 10 | Recognize the results page as a table of hospitals and their ratings. Scroll to see whole table. | Computer 3, information 4, numeracy 4, reading 1 |
| 11 | Recognize the “compare” feature, and that checkboxes for the desired hospitals are required to use this feature. Select the appropriate checkboxes for the three hospitals. | Computer 3, information 3, reading 2 |
| 12 | Recognize results as a table of the three selected hospitals with their detailed ratings. Scroll to see whole table. | Computer 3, information 4, numeracy 4, reading 2 |
| 13 | Scroll to locate the “aggressive or conservative” row in the table. Interpret and understand the labels for the aggressive/conservative scale. | Computer 3, information 4, numeracy 4, reading 2 |
| 14 | Identify the least aggressive rating and answer the information need. | Information 5, numeracy 4, reading 2, writing 2 |
| 15 | Click on the “learn more” link. Find the newly opened window. Scroll down to find the text about aggressive/conservative hospitals. Read and understand text. | Computer 3, information 4, health 4, reading 3 |
| 16 | Articulate understanding of what aggressive/conservative means. | Health 4, writing 3 |
a Cognitive task analysis, by increasing complexity: 1 = remembering, 2 = understanding, 3 = applying, 4 = analyzing, 5 = evaluating, 6 = creating.
Summary of task demands from cognitive task analysis
| Literacy type | Question A | Question B | Question C | Whole task |
| Media | 0%a | 0% | 0% | 0% |
| No complexity | No complexity | No complexity | No complexity | |
| Computer | 50% | 50% | 50% | 75% |
| Applying (3) | Applying (3) | Applying (3) | Applying (3) | |
| Health | 50% | 0% | 100% | 35% |
| Analyzing (4) | No complexity | Analyzing (4) | Analyzing (4) | |
| Information | 75% | 100% | 50% | 85% |
| Analyzing (4) | Evaluating (5) | Evaluating (5) | Evaluating (5) | |
| Reading | 75% | 100% | 50% | 90% |
| Applying (3) | Understanding (2) | Applying (3) | Applying (3) | |
| Writing | 50% | 50% | 50% | 20% |
| Analyzing (4) | Understanding (2) | Evaluating (5) | Evaluating (5) | |
| Numeracy | 50% | 100% | 50% | 30% |
| Analyzing (4) | Analyzing (4) | Analyzing (4) | Analyzing (4) | |
| Science | 0% | 0% | 100% | 10% |
| No complexity | No complexity | Applying (3) | Applying (3) | |
| Total number of steps | 4 | 2 | 2 | 20b |
a For the task, the following is displayed: the proportion (percentage) of steps that use that eHealth literacy and the highest level of cognitive complexity used in that literacy (number and complexity level).
b Total number of steps for whole task includes a series of 12 navigational steps leading up to questions A, B, and C.
Mapping the framework coding for steps 10–16 to a participant’s performance on the task
| Step | Skills and knowledge required to complete step | Framework code from CTAa | Events that indicate barriers | Framework code for barrier |
| 10 | Recognize the results page as a table of hospitals and their ratings. Scroll to see whole table. | Computer 3, information 4, numeracy 4, reading 1 | Participant asks: “Aggressive or conservative scale—where’s that?” Participant is not on the correct page yet, needs to navigate to the next page first. | Computer 2, information 2 |
| 11 | Recognize the “compare” feature, and that checkboxes for the desired hospitals are required to use this feature. Select the appropriate checkboxes for the three hospitals. | Computer 3, information 3, reading 2 | Researcher prompts: “Use the ‘compare’ feature.” | Computer 3, information 1 |
| Error: participant clicks on “compare” without having selected the hospitals to compare. | Computer 3 | |||
| Researcher prompts: “In order to compare the three, you want to select all three together.” | Computer 3, information 2 | |||
| 12 | Recognize results as a table of the three selected hospitals with their detailed ratings. Scroll to see whole table. | Computer 3, information 4, numeracy 4, reading 2 | No barrier encountered during this step. | None |
| 13 | Scroll to locate the “aggressive or conservative” row in the table. Interpret and understand the labels for the aggressive/conservative scale. | Computer 3, information 4, numeracy 4, reading 2 | Participant confused by the multiple parts of the task question. Researcher prompts: “Look at this part of the question first.” | Information 1 |
| Participant scrolls up and down, and finds the aggressive/conservative scale. Starts to read ahead to the next question. Researcher prompts again: “Try this question first—the hospital that is least aggressive.” | Information 1 | |||
| Participant asks: “Where does it tell you which is least or most aggressive/conservative? In this area here?” (pointing to the scale). | Information 2, numeracy 4 | |||
| 14 | Identify the least aggressive rating and answer the information need. | Information 5, numeracy 4, reading 2, writing 2 | Participant stares at scale, confused. Researcher prompts: “What do you think the scale is telling you; how are you reading the scale?” | Numeracy 4 |
| Participant is very confused by the scale, and answers: “The one that is more conservative is 32%, Bellevue. Least aggressive, Lenox Hill? I’m trying to understand this.” (incorrect) | Numeracy 4 | |||
| 15 | Click on the “learn more” link. Find the newly opened window. Scroll down to find the text about aggressive/conservative hospitals. Read and understand text. | Computer 3, information 4, health 4, reading 3 | Participant is unsure how to approach the next question. Researcher rewords the question and explains what the question is asking. | Information 1, reading 2, information 2, reading 2 |
| Participant clicks on the “learn more” link and scrolls down the page, but cannot find the relevant text. Participant scrolls past the relevant passage. Researcher prompts: “You just missed the description on the page.” | ||||
| 16 | Articulate understanding of what aggressive/conservative means. | Health 4, writing 3 | Participant reads the text passage, then answers: “More doctors visit overall for aggressive/conservative care...fewer days in the hospital.” (incorrect) | Health 3 |
a Cognitive task analysis, by increasing complexity: 1 = remembering, 2 = understanding, 3 = applying, 4 = analyzing, 5 = evaluating, 6 = creating.
Figure 3Hospital ratings task: distribution of participants’ scores on questions A, B, and C, and average (Avg) scores for each question.
Figure 4Number of barriers encountered by participants in each step, with labels for the steps that constitute questions A, B, and C.
Figure 5Barriers encountered by participants (n = 20) in steps 10–16, categorized by literacy (color in legend) and complexity level (number in the graph).