| Literature DB >> 32720900 |
Gunhild Brørs1, Tore Wentzel-Larsen2,3, Håvard Dalen1,4,5, Tina B Hansen6,7, Cameron D Norman8, Astrid Wahl9, Tone M Norekvål10,11.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Web-based technology has recently become an important source for sharing health information with patients after an acute cardiac event. Therefore, consideration of patients' perceived electronic health (eHealth) literacy skills is crucial for improving the delivery of patient-centered health information.Entities:
Keywords: eHEALS; eHealth literacy; health literacy; percutaneous coronary intervention; psychometric properties; validation
Year: 2020 PMID: 32720900 PMCID: PMC7420812 DOI: 10.2196/17312
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Med Internet Res ISSN: 1438-8871 Impact factor: 5.428
Hypotheses regarding the relationship between eHEALSa scores and demographic information, health-related internet use, health literacy, and health status based on previous evidence.
| Variables | Evidence (relationship with eHEALS)a | CONCARD-PCI hypothesis | Analysis | |
|
|
|
|
| |
|
| Age | Weak [ | Weak to moderate relationship | Pearson correlation |
|
| Gender | Weak [ | Weak relationship | |
|
| Education | Weak [ | Weak relationship | ANOVAb |
|
| Employment | Weak [ | Weak relationship | ANOVA |
|
|
|
|
| |
|
| Used the internet to find information about health | Weak [ | Moderate relationship | |
|
| Patient’s interest in using the internet for health information in general (frequency of information-seeking) | Significant [ | Moderate relationship | Spearman correlation |
|
|
|
|
| |
|
| Ability to find good health information | Moderate [ | Moderate relationship | Pearson correlation |
|
| Appraisal of health information | Positive [ | Moderate relationship | Pearson correlation |
| Health status based on RAND-12c (mental and physical component) | Weak [ | Moderate relationship | Pearson correlation | |
aeHEALS: Electronic health literacy scale.
bANOVA: analysis of variance.
cRAND-12: 12-item short-form health survey.
Figure 1Flow chart of the inclusion process. PCI: percutaneous coronary intervention; TAVI: transcatheter aortic valve implantation.
Demographic and clinical characteristics of patients after percutaneous coronary intervention (N=1695).a
| Characteristic | Value | Na | |
| Age (years), mean (SD) | 66 (10) | 1695 | |
| Gender (male), n (%) | 1313 (77.46) | 1695 | |
|
|
| 1529 | |
|
| Married/Living with partner | 1173 (76.72) |
|
|
| Living alone | 356 (23.28) |
|
|
|
| 1561 | |
|
| Current smoker | 372 (23.83) |
|
|
| Previous smoker (>1 month) | 713 (45.68) |
|
|
| Never smoked | 476 (30.49) |
|
|
|
| 1522 | |
|
| Secondary school | 331 (21.75) |
|
|
| Trade school | 543 (35.68) |
|
|
| High school | 156 (10.25) |
|
|
| College/university (<4 years) | 269 (17.67) |
|
|
| College/university (≥4 years) | 223 (14.65) |
|
|
|
| 1544 | |
|
| Working | 559 (36.20) |
|
|
| Retired | 771 (49.94) |
|
|
| Other (sick leave, disability pension, seeking employment) | 214 (13.86) |
|
|
|
| 1685 | |
|
| Peripheral vascular disease | 129 (7.66) |
|
|
| Stroke | 72 (4.27) |
|
|
| Myocardial infarction | 346 (20.53) |
|
|
| Diabetes | 314 (18.63) |
|
|
| Previous PCIb | 426 (25.28) | |
|
| Previous CABGc | 180 (10.68) |
|
|
| Previous other heart surgery | 19 (1.13) |
|
|
|
| 1695 | |
|
| SAPd | 473 (27.91) |
|
|
| UAPe | 266 (15.69) |
|
|
| NSTEMIf | 522 (30.80) |
|
|
| STEMIg | 346 (20.41) |
|
|
| Other | 88 (5.19) |
|
| Access to electronic equipment with internet access, n (%) | 1402 (93.66) | 1497 | |
| Used the internet to find information about health, n (%) | 980 (66.08) | 1483 | |
aNumber of observations for each characteristic may not total 1695 because of missing data.
bPCI: percutaneous coronary intervention.
cCABG: coronary artery bypass grafting.
dSAP: stable angina pectoris.
eUAP: unstable angina pectoris.
fNSTEMI: nonST-segment elevation myocardial infarction.
gSTEMI: ST-segment elevation myocardial infarction.
Mean (SD) scores and Cronbach α values of the eHEALSa, HLQb, and RAND-12c of patients after percutaneous coronary intervention (N=1659).
| Item | Mean (SD) | Cronbach α | ||
| eHEALSa | 25.66 (6.23) | >.999 | ||
|
|
|
| ||
|
| HLQ 5e | 2.43 (0.66) | .844 | |
|
| HLQ 8d | 3.22 (0.73) | .875 | |
|
|
|
| ||
|
| PCSf12 | 43.93 (10.88) | N/Ag | |
|
| MCSh12 | 46.48 (11.14) | N/A | |
aeHEALS: eHealth literacy scale.
bHLQ: health literacy questionnaire.
cHLQ 5:Appraisal of health information.
dHLQ 8: Ability to find good health information.
eRAND-12: 12-item short-form health survey.
fPCS: physical composite score.
gN/A: not applicable; since PCS12 and MCS12 of RAND-12 are not computed as means or sum scores, there is no Cronbach α.
hMCS: mental health composite score.
Goodness-of-fit indices of the eHEALSa 1-, 2-, and 3-factor structure model.
| Model | Chi square (df) | RMSEAb (90% CI) | SRMRc | CFId | TLIe |
| Model 1f | 1649.256 (20) | 0.247 (0.237-0.257) | 0.045 | 0.966 | 0.952 |
| Model 2g | 1482.130 (19) | 0.240 (0.230-0.251) | 0.040 | 0.969 | 0.955 |
| Model 3h | 510.925 (17) | 0.148 (0.137-0.159) | 0.019 | 0.990 | 0.983 |
aeHEALS: eHealth literacy scale.
bRMSEA: root mean square error of approximation.
cSRMR: standardized root mean square residual.
dCFI: comparative fit index.
eTLI: Tucker-Lewis index.
f1-factor model: Factor 1:1-8 [4].
g2-factor model: Factor 1: 1-5, 8; Factor 2: 6, 7 [15].
h3-factor model: Factor 1: 1, 2; Factor 2: 3-5; Factor 3: 6-8 [9].
Figure 2Electronic health literacy scale (eHEALS) 3-factor model proposed by Sudbury-Riley et al [9] with modification for items 1 and 5.
Group statistics and correlations between eHEALSa score, patients’ demographic, and other instruments.
| Variable | Statistic | ||
|
|
|
| |
|
| Age, Pearson correlation coefficient | –0.206 | <.001 |
|
| Gender, 95% CI | –3.38-1.95 | .60 |
|
| Education, | 21.085 | <.001 |
|
| Employment, | 19.615 | <.001 |
|
|
| ||
|
| Use of internet, 95% CI | –21.40 to –17.21 | <.001 |
|
| eHEALS supp. 1c, Spearman correlation coefficient | 0.587 | <.001 |
|
| eHEALS supp. 2d, Spearman correlation coefficient | 0.574 | <.001 |
|
|
|
| |
|
| HLQe 5f, Pearson correlation coefficient | 0.380 | <.001 |
|
| HLQ 8g, Pearson correlation coefficient | 0.561 (<.001) | <.001 |
|
|
| ||
|
| Mental component, Pearson correlation coefficient | 0.116 | <.001 |
|
| Physical component, Pearson correlation coefficient | 0.112 | <.001 |
aeHEALS; eHealth literacy scale.
bANOVA: analysis of variance.
ceHEALS supp.1: How useful do you feel the internet is in helping you in making decisions about your health?
deHEALS supp.2: How important is it for you to be able to access health resources on the internet?
eHLQ: health literacy questionnaire.
fHLQ domain 5: appraisal of health information.
gHLQ domain 8: ability to find good information.
hRAND-12: 12-item short-form health survey.
Figure 3Association between electronic health literacy scale (eHEALS) scores, gender, and age. The scale was linearly transformed to a 0-100 scale. The scale was linearly converted to an 8-40 scale (scale from 8 to 40 computed as 8 + [scale from 0 to 100] × [40 – 8]/100). The eHEALS scale in the figure is: 0=8, 20=14.4, 40=20.8, 60=27.2, 80=33.6, 100=40.