| Literature DB >> 23846668 |
Belinda Reininger1, Laurel Person Mecca, Kendra M Stine, Kevan Schultz, Luke Ling, David Halpern.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: The majority of Americans now access the Internet, thereby expanding prospects for Web-based health-related education and intervention. However, there remains a digital divide among those with lower income and education, and among Spanish-speaking populations in the United States. Additional concerns are the low eHealth literacy rate among these populations and their interest in Internet-delivered interventions with these components. Given these factors, combined with the prevalence of type 2 diabetes among low socioeconomic status and Spanish-speaking Americans, strides need to be taken to reach these populations with online tools for diabetes prevention and management that are at once accessible and efficacious.Entities:
Keywords: African Americans; Internet; Mexican-Americans; diabetes; dietary intake; health literacy; physical activity; socioeconomic status; website
Year: 2013 PMID: 23846668 PMCID: PMC3713918 DOI: 10.2196/resprot.2573
Source DB: PubMed Journal: JMIR Res Protoc ISSN: 1929-0748
Demographics of sample (N=71).
|
| Gender | Education level | Household income | |||
| Ethnic group | Male | Female | <College | Some college+ | <$40,000 | >$40,000 |
| African American (n=19) | 15.8 (3) | 84.2 (16) | 10.5 (2) | 89.5 (17) | 78.9 (15) | 21.1 (4) |
| Caucasian (n=27) | 14.8 (4) | 85.2 (23) | 0.0 (0) | 100.0 (27) | 13.24 (9) | 25.00a (17) |
| Mexican American (n=25) | 16.0 (4) | 84.0 (21) | 24.0 (6) | 76.0 (19) | 87.0 (20) | 13.0 a (3) |
| Total (71) | 15.5 (11) | 84.5 (60) | 11.27 (8) | 88.73 (63) | 64.7 (44) | 35.3 a (24) |
aParticipants refused to answer.
Quotes from frequency theme: searching for health information is commonplace.
| Participant ethnicity | Habitual searching | Intermittent searching |
| African American | A lot, couple times a week. Not necessarily diabetes, but always about health. Always about eating and exercising, always. | Mmm…couple times a year, just depending on what’s going on in the family. |
| Caucasian | Weekly. Yes. Pretty much general definition, you know then that kind of segues into symptoms. You know, not drilling down into management, but, risk factors, symptoms, starting there. | My daughter has a lot of medical problems, so I do use the Internet a lot. Basically I would just go into Google or Yahoo, type in the basic thing that I was looking for. Sometimes it would be a little overwhelming because you have all these links and you don’t know exactly where to go...For example, she has asthma, so I would type in things, like…ways to make it more tolerable, or ways to treat, alternative treatment methods, things like that. Just like a general term. On average probably two to four times a month maybe, depending on what I’m going through at the time. If I’m sick or she’s sick. |
| Caucasian | Quite a bit, especially lately. You know, a couple times a week at least, you know, at various times through the day, and so it’s been frequent lately. |
|
| Mexican American | There are times that people tell me “hey, there is a website.” Or some time ago, people told me that there was a talk about stem cells, that they may help diabetes. That is when I go in and look…I am not on the computer all day because I am a stay home mom. Whenever I have a chance I sit down and read. Generally it is once a week…and I also get my daughter involved. | I would say like every 2 weeks, when I get a chance I go and…search this and that. |
| Mexican American | Two or three days of the week or more when I feel like working at the computer. |
|
Content theme: Searching for a broad spectrum of health content.
| Participant Ethnicity | Searching for health conditions or general health topics | Searching as a reaction to symptoms |
| African American | Everything. Literally. But strangely, I didn’t do diabetes. Cancer…Everyone—it seems like everyone’s dying from cancer, heart disease. I mean, it’s kind of like the same thing, and I always thought, food was our trigger, like one of our main triggers, and how we’re eating. | I usually will go on Google, and whatever I think the ailment would be, I’ll just type that in and see what comes up. I’ll go to various websites, but it’s hard when you’re looking up information online ’cause not a lot of the sites are trustworthy. You have to kind of find a way to filter out the good sites from the bad ones. Find out what information is actually useful and what could be discarded…Even if I’m sniffling and sneezing, I’m like, “Ugh, this might be a cold.” I’ll type in “common cold” or “swine flu.” |
| Caucasian | I would say maybe, maybe once a month. I mean it possibly could be more. Like if I‘m on, like MSN website, MSN.com, and you know they’re advertising something that has to do with health, I might click on it. Or, if I want to look into something…then it might be more. | Anytime I think I’m sick, since I don’t have health insurance, I try to find a website. It will tell me “Well, if you have this and this, it might be this.” I can kind of get a feel for if it’s the flu or something like that…Recently, my girlfriend has some mental health issues, so I’ve been looking up those kind of things on WebMD or different websites like that. That’s the only one I can think of off-hand now. They’ve just been really unhelpful. |
| Mexican American | Yes, I have searched for cholesterol because that is what always worries me a little bit more, right? For the same reason, because of family issues. I have a grandfather who had a heart attack, and an aunt who had a stroke. So then you focus on cholesterol. | So, there specifically is what most interests me. Since these two had breast cancer, that’s where I focus more to see what risks I have. |
Content theme: Additional health information sought by African American.
| Participant ethnicity | Searching for health information about weight loss, dietary intake |
| African American | Well, weight, you know. What causes the weight, calories intake. I’m still trying to learn about that, what the calories are, and what would be right for me to have in a day. They say women should have no more than 2000 calories—I think it’s 2000, or 1500 to 2000 calories—but what would that consist of, you know? Like what would I have in the morning? Would I have 300 or 400 calories in the morning, and maybe 200 calories for that type of calorie? I’m kind of confused when it comes to how much I should be eating. |
| African American | It’s always been easy for me to find information. I’m good with computers and it’s just easy. All you have to do is just put in a name and you can just find whatever you want to find…I always look at things about weight. And about food. I always look for weight, food, and exercise. Even in stores I always read labels. |
Searching for diabetes information online is not universal.
| Participant ethnicity | Previously searched for diabetes-related information | Has never searched |
| African American | More so…yeah, my doctor had mentioned something about a drug that she could possibly give me if my blood sugar didn’t improve, so I looked that drug up. | No. I never looked. |
| Caucasian | Yes. I actually did look for it a couple other times because I was thinking that I was. I just actually remember this because my friend said that she felt that she was experiencing symptoms of diabetes…being thirsty often. And so I remember I Googled it, I was like, “oh, I’m thirsty a lot, too,” and, I was like “I do eat a lot of sugar, so, and it’s in my family.” I went and just looked up about diabetes. Yeah, I was looking for the symptoms, because I think to be diagnosed you have to go to your doctor and have blood work done. | No. For some reason diabetes is [chuckles] not really one of those. I know of some people with diabetes, and it’s not like as serious...like they’re living with it, so. |
| Mexican American | It is important that she [daughter] sees how the whole system works and how diabetes affects her as well. Very important for her to know. And I also investigate a lot about carbohydrates, because our doctor talks a lot about the importance of the carbohydrates diabetics need to take. Then there are times when we do not know the portions, the foods, the carbohydrates. | No, to tell you the truth because I was never at risk. I really didn’t worry a lot for that. I worried more about triglycerides or something that I’m at risk for. |
Accessing online health information.
| Participant ethnicity | Utilizing various locations and technologies to access online health information |
| African American | It could be on a laptop at home, my netbook at home, the desktops in the library, and I’ve even done searching on my smartphone. |
| Caucasian | Yeah, I don’t do phone. I don’t even know what they’re called anymore. [laughs] So it’s pretty much at home, you know we have the laptop. |
| Mexican American | Yes, a desktop…but my son has an iPad and that is much easier to search. So when I don’t have time to sit down at the computer because someone is using it, well I use that. |
Diabetes knowledge post exposure to website controlling for health literacy, ethnicity, transtheoretical model stage for exercise and fruit and vegetable consumption, and Internet literacy.
| Parameter | Estimate | Standard Error |
|
| Intercept | 10.78 | 4.77 | .027 |
| Pre-diabetes knowledge score | 0.40 | 0.07 | <.001 |
| Health literacy | 0.13 | 0.14 | .37 |
| African American | -0.84 | 0.85 | .32 |
| Caucasian | 0.81 | 0.77 | .30 |
| Mexican American | 0.00 | . | . |
| Pre-exercise stage |
|
| .48b |
| Pre-exercise stage CONTEMPLATION | -0.29 | 0.85 | .74 |
| Pre-exercise stage PREPARATION (REFERENT) | 0.00 | . | . |
| Pre-exercise stage ACTION | 0.75 | 0.74 | .32 |
| Pre fruit/vegetable stage |
|
| .010b |
| Pre fruit/ vegetable stage PRE-CONTEMPLATION | -3.09 | 0.90 | 001a |
| Pre fruit/ vegetable stage CONTEMPLATION | -0.21 | 0.75 | .78 |
| Pre fruit/ vegetable stage PREPARATION | 0.00 | . | . |
| Pre fruit/ vegetable stage ACTION | -1.073 | 1.87 | .57 |
| Internet literacy score | -0.04 | 0.02 | .04a |
aSignificant at P≤.05.
bFrom F test
Intention to eat a healthy diet post exposure to website controlling for health literacy, ethnicity, transtheoretical model stage for exercise and fruit and vegetable consumption, and Internet literacy.
| Parameter | Estimate | Standard Error |
|
| Intercept | 3.03 | 1.20 | .01 |
| Pre-intention for healthy diet | 0.51 | 0.09 | <.001 |
| Health literacy | -0.01 | 0.03 | .78 |
| African American | -0.26 | 0.19 | .19 |
| Caucasian | -0.20 | 0.18 | .29 |
| Mexican American | 0.00 | . | . |
| Pre-exercise stage |
|
| .073b |
| Pre-exercise stage CONTEMPLATION | -0.17 | 0.20 | .41 |
| Pre-exercise stage PREPARATION (REFERENT) | 0.00 | . | . |
| Pre-exercise stage ACTION | -0.41 | 0.18 | .023a |
| Pre fruit/ vegetable stage |
|
| .62b |
| Pre fruit/ vegetable stage PRE-CONTEMPLATION | 0.05 | 0.22 | .82 |
| Pre fruit/ vegetable stage CONTEMPLATION | -0.12 | 0.18 | .50 |
| Pre fruit/ vegetable stage PREPARATION | 0.00 | . | . |
| Pre fruit/ vegetable stage ACTION | 0.44 | 0.44 | .32 |
| Internet literacy score | -0.01 | 0.01 | .30 |
aSignificant at P≤.05
bFrom F test