| Literature DB >> 31066696 |
Abstract
BACKGROUND: The world's internet penetration rate is increasing yearly; approximately 25% of the world's population are internet users. In Asia, Taiwan has the fifth highest internet usage, and has an internet penetration rate higher than the world average. Electronic health (eHealth) literacy is the ability to read, understand, and utilize Web health information. eHealth literacy is gaining attention worldwide.Entities:
Keywords: eHealth literacy; intergenerational relations; mixed method; older adult students; traditional college students
Year: 2019 PMID: 31066696 PMCID: PMC6526685 DOI: 10.2196/11480
Source DB: PubMed Journal: JMIR Hum Factors ISSN: 2292-9495
Demographic data on the interviewees.
| Interviewees, gender | Age (years) | Educational level | |
| Male | 20 | Studying at university (sophomore, the second year of college) | |
| Male | 20 | Studying at university (sophomore, the second year of college) | |
| Male | 19 | Studying at university (freshman, the first year of college) | |
| Female | 21 | Studying at university (junior, the third year of college) | |
| Female | 20 | Studying at university (sophomore, the second year of college) | |
| Male | 57 | Senior high school | |
| Male | 62 | Junior high school | |
| Female | 70 | Junior high school | |
| Female | 59 | Senior high school | |
| Female | 68 | Elementary school | |
Interview guide items.
| Focus point, open questions | The concept of health literacy | |
| What kind of online health information are you more interested in? | Basic ability to read health information ( | |
| What kind of source for online health information are you more interested in? | Knowledge of a supportive, interactive environment that provides health information ( | |
| How would you evaluate your internet health information reading and implementation experiences? | Basic ability to read and use health information ( | |
| How do you assess the accuracy of health information? What is the assessment principle? | Both criticism of health information and its application to one’s health | |
Coding and categorization examples.
| Main category, subcategories, axial coding | Open coding | ||
| College students access most online health information from Web pages [A-2-64] | We college students retrieved most online health information from Web pages. [A-5-31] The most commonly used Web pages or websites are the occasional Yahoo News health section. [A-2-64] | ||
| Older adult students often obtained online health information through communication software [B-5-11] | We have a Line group in the class; every day we share messages. [B-5-11] Computers are used less now, as mobile phones are the most convenient. We often use communication software to share health information. [B-4-15] | ||
| Traditional college students | At University, my friends always pay special attention to their appearance, so I pay special attention to my looks. [A-1-28] | ||
| Older adult students | Since retirement, I pay special attention to diet and health issues such as exercise and fitness It is good for health. [B-3-5] | ||
Electronic Heath Literacy Scale means, SDs, and t tests.
| Factor | Traditional college students (N=65), mean (SD) | Older adult students, (N=143), mean (SD) | The assumption of equal variances | |||
| Functional electronic health literacy | 11.43 (1.94) | 8.08 (1.56) | 3.706 | .06 | 12.17 (206) | <.001 |
| Interactive electronic health literacy | 14.50 (2.67) | 14.60 (2.52) | 0.100 | .75 | −0.263 (206) | .79 |
| Critical electronic health literacy | 17.81 (3.74) | 18.18 (3.28) | 3.214 | .08 | −0.71 (206) | .48 |
| Electronic health literacy | 43.78 (6.68) | 40.93 (5.10) | 3.711 | .06 | 2.98 (206) | <.001 |