| Literature DB >> 28410186 |
Lawrence C An1, Lauren Wallner2, Matthias Alexander Kirch1.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: The Internet is commonly used as a source of health information, but little is known about the Internet practices specific to cancer patients.Entities:
Keywords: Internet; cancer patients; information; social support
Year: 2016 PMID: 28410186 PMCID: PMC5369628 DOI: 10.2196/cancer.5785
Source DB: PubMed Journal: JMIR Cancer ISSN: 2369-1999
Levels of social engagement characterized by self-reported participation in Internet-based health activities.a
| Internet-based health activities | No social engagement | Social consumers | Social producers | Formal group |
| Read or learned about other patients' health experiences? | No | Yes | Yes or no | Yes or no |
| Wrote about or shared your own health experiences with other patients? | No | No | Yes to this one, or to one of next two items | Yes or no |
| Written or posted updates for family or friends about your health or how you are feeling? | No | No | Yes to this one, or the item above or below | Yes or no |
| Wrote in an online diary or blog? | No | No | Yes to this one, or to one of the above two items | Yes or no |
| Participated in an online support group or community for people with cancer? | No | No | No | Yes |
aParticipants were asked to respond to the following: “Below are some ways people use the Internet. Some people have done these things, but others have not. Please tell us whether or not you have done each of these things while using the Internet.”
Demographic and health data of the survey sample (N=1282a).
| Characteristic | n (%) | |
| Male | 512 (39.94) | |
| Female | 768 (59.91) | |
| <50 | 320 (24.96) | |
| 50-69 | 701 (54.68) | |
| 70+ | 221 (17.24) | |
| White | 1133 (88.38) | |
| Nonwhite | 142 (11.08) | |
| High school or less | 288 (22.46) | |
| Some college | 407 (31.75) | |
| 4-year degree or higher | 574 (44.77) | |
| <1 | 270 (21.06) | |
| 1-2 | 343 (26.76) | |
| 3-9 | 373 (29.10) | |
| 10+ | 209 (16.30) | |
| Leukemia/lymphoma | 326 (25.43) | |
| Breast | 298 (23.24) | |
| Cutaneous | 176 (13.73) | |
| Prostate/urological | 173 (13.49) | |
| Gynecological | 161 (12.56) | |
| Gastrointestinal | 144 (11.23) | |
| Sarcoma/soft tissue | 80 (6.24) | |
| Thoracic | 46 (3.59) | |
| Head and neck | 41 (3.20) | |
| Thyroid/endocrine | 23 (1.79) | |
| Neurological | 12 (0.94) | |
| Other/unknown | 17 (1.33) | |
| Any comorbid conditions | 926 (72.23) | |
| Poor | 100 (7.80) | |
| Fair | 352 (27.46) | |
| Good | 521 (40.64) | |
| Very good | 215 (16.77) | |
| Excellent | 55 (4.29) | |
aCategories may not add up to the total of 1282 due to item nonresponse on demographic characteristics.
bCancer site is nonexclusive.
cPatients were asked, “How would you rate your current health?”
Internet use and experiences of cancer center patients (N=1282).
| Activity | n (%) |
| Have a home computer | 1083 (84.48) |
| Use the Internet | 1096 (85.49) |
| Daily Internet use | 747 (58.27) |
| Looked for cancer information | 862 (67.24) |
| Read about other patients’ experiences | 619 (48.28) |
| Wrote about own health experiences | 234 (18.25) |
| Participated in an online cancer support group | 128 (9.98) |
| Posted health updates for family or friends | 452 (35.26) |
| Wrote in an online diary or blog | 95 (7.41) |
Figure 1Breakdown of social engagement levels among Internet users (N=1096).
Level of social engagement of Internet users by key demographic factors (N=1096).
| Characteristic | No social engagement, n (%) | Social consumer, n (%) | Social producer, n (%) | Formal group, n (%) | ||
| All patients (N=1096b) | 331 (30.20) | 227 (20.17) | 410 (37.41) | 128 (11.68) | ||
| Male (n=427) | 152 (35.6) | 85 (19.9) | 154 (36.1) | 36 (8.4) | .003 | |
| Female (n=667) | 178 (26.7) | 142 (21.3) | 255 (38.2) | 92 (13.8) | ||
| <50 (n=303) | 68 (22.4) | 54 (17.8) | 122 (40.3) | 59 (19.5) | <.001 | |
| 50-69 (n=620) | 187 (30.2) | 146 (23.6) | 224 (36.1) | 63 (10.2) | ||
| 70+ (n=142) | 64 (45.1) | 22 (15.5) | 52 (36.6) | 4 (2.8) | ||
| White (n=968) | 289 (29.9) | 194 (20.0) | 374 (38.6) | 111 (11.5) | .13 | |
| Nonwhite (n=122) | 41 (33.6) | 31 (25.4) | 34 (27.9) | 16 (13.1) | ||
| High school or less (n=174) | 89 (51.2) | 18 (10.3) | 56 (32.2) | 11 (6.3) | <.001 | |
| Some college (n=365) | 106 (29.0) | 79 (21.6) | 137 (37.5) | 43 (11.8) | ||
| College degree (n=546) | 132 (24.2) | 128 (23.4) | 213 (39.0) | 73 (13.4) | ||
| <1 (n=234) | 80 (34.2) | 47 (20.1) | 89 (38.0) | 18 (7.7) | .15 | |
| 1-2.99 (n=294) | 83 (28.2) | 56 (19.1) | 119 (40.5) | 36 (12.2) | ||
| 3-9.99 (n=329) | 92 (28.0) | 79 (24.0) | 110 (33.4) | 48 (14.6) | ||
| 10+ (n=177) | 57 (32.2) | 33 (18.6) | 69 (39.0) | 18 (10.2) | ||
| None (n=327) | 87 (26.6) | 77 (23.6) | 124 (37.9) | 39 (11.9) | .28 | |
| 1 or more (n=769) | 244 (31.7) | 150 (19.5) | 286 (37.2) | 89 (11.6) | ||
| Poor (n=86) | 23 (27) | 17 (20) | 31 (36) | 15 (17) | .14 | |
| Fair (n=284) | 80 (28.2) | 58 (20.4) | 115 (40.5) | 31 (10.9) | ||
| Good (n=449) | 138 (30.7) | 85 (18.9) | 172 (38.3) | 54 (12.0) | ||
| Very good (n=197) | 56 (28.4) | 47 (23.9) | 73 (37.1) | 21 (10.7) | ||
| Excellent (n=53) | 22 (42) | 17 (32) | 10 (19) | 4 (8) | ||
aP values are from chi-square analyses comparing level of social engagement by patient characteristics.
bCategories may not add to the total of 1096 due to item nonresponse on demographic characteristics.
Figure 2Percentage of patients reporting that the Internet was somewhat or very useful for information about cancer (top line) and social support (bottom line). Bars indicate 95% confidence intervals. Comparisons between the socially engaged groups’ ratings and the “no social engagement” group were made and tested using simple logistic regression. *P=.001, **P<.001.
Cancer patients' reports of most recent Internet search for cancer information, among those who reported information searching (N=913).
| Feelings reported | No social engagement | Social consumer | Social producer | Formal group | |
| Overwhelmed | 55 (25.9) | 83 (39.2) | 169 (46.4) | 53 (42.4) | <.001 |
| Eager | 39 (18.4) | 70 (33.0) | 148 (40.7) | 75 (60.0) | <.001 |
| Confused | 38 (17.9) | 66 (31.1) | 134 (36.8) | 49 (39.2) | <.001 |
| Relieved or comforted | 45 (21.2) | 104 (49.1) | 163 (44.8) | 87 (69.6) | <.001 |
| Frustrated | 23 (10.9) | 50 (23.6) | 99 (27.2) | 44 (35.2) | <.001 |
| Confident | 67 (31.6) | 141 (66.5) | 243 (66.8) | 95 (76.0) | <.001 |
| Frightened | 33 (15.6) | 66 (31.1) | 119 (32.7) | 44 (35.2) | <.001 |
| Reassured | 74 (34.9) | 128 (60.4) | 236 (64.8) | 103 (82.4) | <.001 |
Figure 3Mean of sum of the positive (top line) and negative (bottom line) experiences of cancer patients searching for cancer information online (n=801). Bars indicate 95% confidence intervals. Comparisons between the socially engaged groups’ ratings compared to the “no social engagement” group were made and tested using ordered logistic regression (ologit). *P<.001.