| Literature DB >> 26721292 |
Abstract
BACKGROUND: The rise of technology has changed how people take control of their health, enabling individuals to choose to live healthier lives and make better treatment decisions. With this said, the Internet has emerged as the channel used by individuals for actively seeking or passively receiving health information.Entities:
Keywords: e-health literacy; online health information; online information seeking; young adults
Year: 2015 PMID: 26721292 PMCID: PMC4713906 DOI: 10.2196/med20.4327
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Med 2 0 ISSN: 1923-2195
Definitions of eHealth (as cited in Oh et al [9]).
| Source | Definition |
| Mitchell (1999) | A new term needed to describe the combined use of electronic communication and information technology in the health sector. The use in the health sector of digital data – transmitted, stored and retrieved electronically – for clinical, educational and administrative purposes, both at the local site and at a distance. |
| McLendon (2000) | eHealth refers to all forms of electronic healthcare delivered over the Internet, ranging from informational, educational and commercial “products” to direct services offered by professionals, non-professionals, businesses or consumers themselves. eHealth includes a wide variety of the clinical activities that have traditionally characterized telehealth, but delivered through the Internet. Simply stated, eHealth is making healthcare more efficient, while allowing patients and professionals to do the previously impossible. |
| Medical Business News (2000) | eHealth is a convergence between the Internet and the health care industry to provide consumers with a wide variety of information relating to the health care field |
| Oracle Corporation (2000) | Healthcare transactions, encounters, messaging, or care provision occurring electronically. |
| Deluca, Enmark (2000) | eHealth is the embryonic convergence of wide-reaching technologies like the Internet, computer telephony/interactive voice response, wireless communications, and direct access to healthcare providers, care management, education, and wellness. |
| Prelow (2000) | eHealth is the process of providing health care via electronic means, in particular over the Internet. It can include teaching, monitoring (eg, physiologic data), and interaction with health care providers, as well as interaction with other patients afflicted with the same conditions. |
| Baur, Deering & Hsu (2001) | The most broad term is eHealth, with refers to the use of electronic technologies in health, health care and public health. (...) The various functions of eHealth [are]: (...) reference (electronic publishing, catalogues, databases); self-help/self-care (online health information, support groups, health risk assessment, personal health records), Plan/provider convenience services (online scheduling, test and lab results, benefit summaries), Consultation and referral (doctor-patient or doctor-doctor consultation via telemedicine systems, remote readings of digital image and pathology samples), eHealth commerce (sales of health related product and services) [and] Public health services (automated data collection, data warehouses, online access to population survey data and registries, advance detection and warning systems for public health threats). (...) This chapter uses the term eHealth to refer to the broadest possible range of interactive technologies applied to health and health care. |
| Orlikoff & Totten (2001) | The use of the Internet and related information systems and technology in all aspects of health care. |
| Eysenbach (2001) | eHealth is an emerging field in the intersection of medical informatics, public health and business, referring to health services and information delivered or enhanced through the Internet and related technologies. In a broader sense, the term characterizes not only a technical development, but also a state-of-mind, a way of thinking, an attitude, and a commitment for networked, global thinking, to improve health care locally, regionally, and worldwide by using information and communication technology |
| Blake (2001) | The combined use of electronic communication and information technology in the health sector. It is important to note that eHealth is much more than business transactions. It encompasses everything from digital data transmission to purchase orders, lab reports, patient histories and insurance claims. |
| Robert J Wood Foundation (2001) | eHealth is the use of emerging information and communication technology, especially the Internet, to improve or enable health and health care. |
| Wysocki (2001) | eHealth refers to all forms of electronic healthcare delivered over the Internet, ranging from informational, educational and commercial “products” to direct services offered by professionals, non-professionals, businesses or consumers themselves |
| Health e-Technologies Initiative (2002) | The use of emerging interactive technologies (i.e., Internet, interactive TV, interactive voice response systems, kiosks, personal digital assistants, CD-ROMs, DVD-ROMs) to enable health improvement and health care services. |
| Kirshbaum (2002) | There are many different definitions of eHealth: Electronic connectivity vehicle for improving the efficiency and effectiveness of healthcare delivery Enabling consumers/patients to be better informed about their healthcare Enabling providers to deliver better care in more efficient ways |
| Wyatt and Liu (2002) | The use of internet technology by the public, health workers, and others to access health and lifestyle information, services and support; it encompasses |
| Staudenmeir (2003) | Any use of the Internet or related technology to improve: the health and wellness of the population; the quality of healthcare services and outcomes; efficiencies in healthcare services or administration |
| COACH (2003) | The leveraging of the information and communication technology (ICT) to connect provider and patients and governments; to educate and inform health care professionals, managers and consumers; to stimulate innovation in care delivery and health system management; and, to improve our health care system. |
| RX2000 (2003) | eHealth signifies a concerted effort undertaken by some leaders in healthcare and hi-tech industries to harness the benefits available through convergence of the Internet and healthcare. Access, cost, quality and portability have been concerns in the health care arena. It's evident from many recent surveys that both health consumers and healthcare professionals are frustrated with the maze of health care delivery. Some, therefore, are turning to the Internet for answers and cost effective solutions. |
| WHO (2003) | eHealth is a new term used to describe the combined use of electronic communication and information technology in the health sector OR is the use, in the health sector, of digital data-transmitted, stored and retrieved electronically-for clinical, educational and administrative purposes, both at the local site and at a distance |
| Southwest Medical Group | eHealth is an emerging field focused on medical information and health care services delivered or enhanced through advanced Internet or related technologies. In a broader sense, the term extends the scope of health care beyond its conventional boundaries. Conceptually, eHealth enables patients to easily obtain medical related services online from health care providers |
| eHealth Technologies (2003) | The use of emerging information and communication technology, especially the Internet, to improve or enable health and healthcare thereby enabling stronger and more effective connections among patients, doctors, hospitals, payors, laboratories, pharmacies, and suppliers |
Figure 1E-health literacy lily model.
Demographics of study participants.
| Characteristic |
| Number of participants |
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| Male | 25 |
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| Female | 25 |
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| White | 30 |
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| Black | 3 |
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| Hispanic | 4 |
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| Asian | 13 |
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| 18-19 | 18 |
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| 20-21 | 12 |
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| 22-23 | 7 |
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| 24-25 | 13 |
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| Heterosexual | 47 |
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| Homosexual | 3 |
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| Single | 23 |
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| In a relationship | 27 |