| Literature DB >> 29986848 |
Samantha R Paige1,2, M David Miller3, Janice L Krieger2,4,5, Michael Stellefson6, JeeWon Cheong1.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Electronic health (eHealth) information is ingrained in the healthcare experience to engage patients across the lifespan. Both eHealth accessibility and optimization are influenced by lifespan development, as older adults experience greater challenges accessing and using eHealth tools as compared to their younger counterparts. The eHealth Literacy Scale (eHEALS) is the most popular measure used to assess patient confidence locating, understanding, evaluating, and acting upon online health information. Currently, however, the factor structure of the eHEALS across discrete age groups is not well understood, which limits its usefulness as a measure of eHealth literacy across the lifespan.Entities:
Keywords: aging; eHealth; eHealth literacy; measurement invariance
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29986848 PMCID: PMC6056742 DOI: 10.2196/10434
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Med Internet Res ISSN: 1438-8871 Impact factor: 5.428
Sociodemographics of millennials, generation X, and baby boomers/silent generation members.
| Characteristic | Millennials (N=281) | Generation X (N=164) | Baby Boomers/Silent Generation (N=384) | |
| Age in years, mean (SD) | 26.64 (5.14) | 42.97 (5.01) | 62.80 (6.66) | |
| Male | 73 (25.9) | 54 (32.9) | 99 (25.7) | |
| Female | 207 (73.7) | 110 (67.1) | 286 (74.3) | |
| Missing | 1 (0.36) | 0 (0.0) | 0 (0.0) | |
| Black/African American | 156 (55.7) | 93 (56.7) | 163 (42.3) | |
| Caucasian | 124 (44.3) | 71 (43.3) | 222 (57.7) | |
| Hispanic | 8 (2.9) | 2 (1.2) | 6 (1.6) | |
| Non-Hispanic | 267 (95.4) | 161 (98.2) | 378 (98.2) | |
| Missing | 5 (1.8) | 1 (0.6) | 1 (0.3) | |
| < High school | 12 (4.3) | 5 (3.0) | 12 (3.1) | |
| High school/GED | 58 (20.7) | 31 (18.9) | 88 (22.9) | |
| Some college | 99 (35.4) | 47 (28.7) | 136 (35.3) | |
| Bachelor’s degree | 65 (23.2) | 39 (23.8) | 67 (17.4) | |
| Master’s degree | 26 (9.3) | 28 (17.1) | 59 (15.3) | |
| Advanced graduate | 18 (6.4) | 13 (7.9) | 23 (5.9) | |
| Missing | 2 (0.7) | 1 (0.6) | 0 (0.0) | |
| ≤$20K/year | 60 (21.6) | 28 (17.1) | 65 (16.9) | |
| $20K-$34,999K/year | 62 (22.3) | 33 (20.1) | 79 (20.6) | |
| $35K-$49,999K/year | 50 (18) | 27 (16.5) | 61 (15.9) | |
| $50K-$74,999K/year | 57 (20.5) | 25 (15.2) | 88 (22.9) | |
| ≥$75K more/year | 49 (17.6) | 51 (31.1) | 91 (23.7) | |
| Yes | 278 (99.3) | 157 (95.7) | 366 (95.1) | |
| No | 2 (0.7) | 7 (4.3) | 19 (4.9) | |
aBlack/African Americans and Caucasian respondents were less likely to be a member of Generation X than any other generation, χ2(2, N=829)=15.62, P<.001.
bMore Millennials reported using the Internet for health, as compared to members of Generation X or Baby Boomers/Silent Generation, χ2 (2, N=829)=9.35, P=.009.
Global model fit estimates for multi-group exploratory structural equation models
| Model | RMSEAa (90% CI) | SRMRb | CFIc | TLId | AICe | ||
| 1-Factor Model | 577.67 (90) | <.001 | .14 (0.13-0.15) | .13 | .88 | .89 | 13135.05 |
| 2-Factor Model | 263.16 (79) | <.001 | .09 (0.08-0.10) | .09 | .96 | .95 | 12842.55 |
| 3-Factor Model | 138.95 (67) | <.001 | .06 (0.05-0.08) | .08 | .98 | .98 | 12742.33 |
| 4-Factor Model | 108.12 (54) | <.001 | .06 (0.04-0.08) | .08 | .99 | .98 | 12737.50 |
aRMSEA: root mean square error of approximation.
bSRMR: standardized root mean square residual.
cCFI: comparative fit index.
dTLI: Tucker-Lewis index.
eAIC: Akaike information criterion.
The 3-factor loadings for each generation.
| Electronic Health Literacy Scale Item | Millennialsa | Generation Xb | Baby Boomer/Silent Generationc | ||||||||
| Factor 1 | Factor 2 | Factor 3 | Factor 1 | Factor 2 | Factor 3 | Factor 1 | Factor 2 | Factor 3 | |||
| (E1) I know what health resources are available on the Internet | .69d | .01 | .06 | .69d | .01 | .06 | .69d | .01 | .06 | ||
| (E2) I know where to find helpful health resources on the Internet | .64d | .18e | –.01 | .64d | .18e | –.01 | .64d | .18e | –.01 | ||
| (E3) I know how to use the health information I find on the Internet to help me | .07 | .39f | .22f | .07 | .40f | .22f | .07 | .40f | .22f | ||
| (E4) I know how to find helpful health resources on the Internet | –.02 | .78d | .01 | –.02 | .78d | .01 | –.02 | .78d | .01 | ||
| (E5) I have the skills I need to evaluate the health resources I find on the Internet. | –.09 | .02 | .72d | –.09 | .02 | .72d | –.09 | .02 | .72d | ||
| (E6) I know how to use the Internet to answer my questions about health. | –.01 | .18d | .45d | –.01 | .18d | .45d | –.01 | .18e | .45d | ||
| (E7) I can tell high quality health resources from low quality health resources on the Internet | .17 | –.03 | .49f | .17 | –.03 | .49d | .17 | –.03 | .50d | ||
aFactor 1 with Factor 2 (r=.70, P<.001), Factor 1 with Factor 3 (r=.63, P<.001), Factor 2 with Factor 3 (r=.76, P<.001).
bFactor 1 with Factor 2 (r=.98, P<.001), Factor 1 with Factor 3 (r=.80, P<.001), Factor 2 with Factor 3 (r=.77, P<.001).
cFactor 1 with Factor 2 (r=.79, P<.001), Factor 1 with Factor 3 (r=.79, P<.001), Factor 2 with Factor 3 (r=.89, P<.001).
dP<.001
eP<.05
fP<.01
Figure 1Proposed 3-factor electronic health literacy scale (eHEALS) measurement model.
Fit statistic summary for testing measurement invariance in the 3-factor model of electronic health literacy scale.
| Model | χ2 ( | RMSEAa | SRMRb | CFIc | TLId | AICe | Model comparison, Δχ2 ( Δ |
| Model 1: Configural Invariance | 160.33 (61) | .08 | .03 | .98 | .97 | 12775.72 | 0.0 (0) |
| Model 2: Pattern Invariance | 175.21 (71) | .07 | .05 | .98 | .97 | 12770.60 | 14.88 (10) |
| Model 3: Unique Factor Invariance | 244.72 (87) | .08 | .08 | .96 | .96 | 12808.11 | 69.51f (16) |
aRMSEA: root mean square error of approximation.
bSRMR: standardized root mean square residual.
cCFI: comparative fit index.
dTLI: Tucker-Lewis index.
eAIC: Akaike Information Criterion.
fP<.05.
Average eHealth literacy scores by age group.
| Electronic Health Literacy Scale Factor | Millennials | Generation X | Baby Boomer/Silent Generation | Total | ||||||||||
| α | ω | Mean (SD) | α | ω | Mean (SD) | α | ω | Mean (SD)a | α | ω | Mean (SD) | |||
| Factor 1: Information Awarenessb | .80 | .80 | 7.69 (1.68) | .91 | .91 | 7.72 (1.80) | .83 | .83 | 7.22 (1.67) | .84 | .84 | 7.48 (1.71) | ||
| Factor 2: Information Seekingc | .86 | .86 | 8.02 (1.50) | .90 | .91 | 8.02 (1.57) | .89 | .89 | 7.66 (1.46) | .88 | .88 | 7.85 (1.51) | ||
| Factor 3: Information Engagementd | .79 | .79 | 15.37 (2.66) | .85 | .84 | 15.55 (2.77) | .86 | .86 | 14.25 (2.97) | .84 | .84 | 14.89 (2.88) | ||
aP<.05.
bFactor 1 (min score=2; max score=10).
cFactor 2 (min score=2; max score=10).
dFactor 3 (min score=4; max score=20).