| Literature DB >> 35409778 |
María F Rivadeneira1, María J Miranda-Velasco2, Hiram V Arroyo3, José D Caicedo-Gallardo1,4, Carmen Salvador-Pinos5.
Abstract
Digital health literacy influences decision-making in health. There are no validated instruments to evaluate the digital literacy about COVID-19 in Spanish-speaking countries. This study aimed to validate the Digital Health Literacy Instrument (DHLI) about COVID-19 adapted to Spanish (COVID-DHLI-Spanish) in university students and to describe its most important results. A cross-sectional study was developed with 2318 university students from Spain, Puerto Rico, and Ecuador. Internal consistency was measured with Cronbach's alpha and principal component analysis. Construct validity was analyzed using Spearman's correlations and the Kruskal-Wallis test. The internal consistency of the questionnaire was good for the global scale (Cronbach's alpha 0.69, 95% CI 0.67) as well as for its dimensions. A total of 51.1% (n = 946) of students had sufficient digital literacy, 40.1% (n = 742) had problematic digital literacy, and 8.8% (n = 162) had inadequate digital literacy. The DHLI was directly and significantly correlated with age, subjective social perception, sense of coherence, and well-being (p < 0.001). The average digital literacy was higher in men than in women, in students older than 22 years, and in those with greater satisfaction with online information (p < 0.001). The COVID-DHLI-Spanish is useful for measuring the digital literacy about COVID-19 in Spanish-speaking countries. This study suggests gaps by gender and socioeconomic perception.Entities:
Keywords: COVID-19; digital health literacy; questionnaire; university students; validation
Mesh:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35409778 PMCID: PMC8998561 DOI: 10.3390/ijerph19074092
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Environ Res Public Health ISSN: 1660-4601 Impact factor: 3.390
Sociodemographic characteristics of participating university students from Spain, Puerto Rico, and Ecuador in 2020 (n = 2318).
| Total | Spain | Puerto Rico | Ecuador | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Characteristic | ||||
| Sex | ||||
| Female | 1624 (70.03) | 889 (76.57) | 178 (73.86) | 557 (60.74) |
| Male | 685 (29.54) | 266 (22.91) | 61 (25.31) | 358 (39.04) |
| Diverse | 10 (0.43) | 6 (0.52) | 2 (0.43) | 2 (0.22) |
| Age | ||||
| Under 22 years old | 1452 (62.64) | 700 (60.29) | 136 (56.43) | 617 (67.28) |
| Older than or equal to 22 years old | 866 (37.36) | 461 (39.71) | 105 (43.57) | 300 (32.72) |
| Study area | ||||
| Engineering sciences and technologies | 233 (10.05) | 142 (12.23) | 45 (18.67) | 46 (5.02) |
| Life sciences and health | 1418 (61.15) | 515 (44.36) | 117 (48.55) | 786 (85.71) |
| Basic Science | 82 (3.54) | 44 (3.79) | 19 (7.88) | 19 (2.07) |
| Social sciences and humanities | 526 (22.68) | 402 (34.63) | 59 (24.48) | 65 (7.09) |
| Another | 60 (2.59) | 58 (5) | 1 (0.41) | 1 (0.11) |
| Level of education | ||||
| Undergraduate | 2054 (88.57) | 1042 (89.75) | 144 (59.75) | 868 (94.66) |
| Master | 178 (7.68) | 86 (7.41) | 68 (28.22) | 24 (2.62) |
| Other (e.g., Ph.D.) | 87 (3.75) | 33 (2.84) | 29 (12.03) | 25 (2.73) |
| Subjective social status (10 steps) | ||||
| 1 | 3 (0.13) | 1 (0.09) | 1 (0.41) | 1 (0.11) |
| 2 | 22 (0.95) | 8 (0.69) | 4 (1.66) | 10 (1.09) |
| 3 | 111 (4.79) | 40 (3.45) | 20 (8.3) | 51 (5.56) |
| 4 | 200 (8.62) | 86 (7.41) | 28 (11.62) | 86 (9.38) |
| 5 | 471 (20.31) | 167 (14.38) | 60 (24.9) | 244 (26.61) |
| 6 | 539 (23.24) | 283 (24.38) | 60 (24.9) | 196 (21.37) |
| 7 | 617 (26.61) | 375 (32.3) | 39 (16.18) | 203 (22.14) |
| 8 | 304 (13.11) | 171 (14.73) | 20 (8.3) | 113 (12.32) |
| 9 | 34 (1.47) | 21 (1.81) | 6 (2.49) | 7 (0.76) |
| 10 | 18 (0.78) | 9 (0.78) | 3 (1.24) | 6 (0.65) |
| Chronic condition | ||||
| No | 1856 (80.03) | 923 (79.5) | 182 (75.52) | 751 (81.9) |
| Yes | 463 (19.97) | 238 (20.5) | 59 (24.48) | 166 (18.1) |
Internal consistency of the DHLI questionnaire translated into Spanish, COVID-DHLI-Spanish (n = 2318).
| Cronbach’s Alpha | Unilateral CI (95%) | |
|---|---|---|
| Global | 0.69 | 0.67 |
| Dimensions | 0.79 | 0.78 |
| Self-generated content | 0.76 | 0.74 |
| Reliability | 0.74 | 0.72 |
| Relevance | 0.73 | 0.71 |
| Privacy protection | 0.45 | 0.41 |
Principal component analysis of the dimensions of the COVID-DHLI-Spanish a.
| Component | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Item | 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 |
| Information searching dimension | |||||
| When you search the Internet for information on coronavirus or related topics, how easy or difficult is it for you to… | |||||
| 1. Make a choice from all the information you find? | 0.54 | ||||
| 2. Use the proper words or search query to find the information you are looking for? | 0.56 | ||||
| 3. Find the exact information you are looking for? | 0.54 | ||||
| Self-generated content dimension | |||||
| When typing a message (on a forum, social network) about coronavirus or related topics, how easy or difficult is it for you to… | |||||
| 4. Clearly formulate your question or health-related worry? | 0.48 | ||||
| 5. Express your opinion, thoughts, or feelings in writing? | 0.62 | ||||
| 6. Write your message as such, for people to understand exactly what you mean? | 0.59 | ||||
| Reliability dimension | |||||
| When you search the Internet for information on coronavirus or related topics, how easy or difficult is it for you to… | |||||
| 7. Decide whether the information is reliable or not? | 0.49 | ||||
| 8. Decide whether the information is written with commercial interests (e.g., advertising, trying to sell products)? | 0.57 | ||||
| 9. Check different websites to see whether they provide the same information? | 0.37 | ||||
| Relevance dimension | |||||
| When you search the Internet for information on coronavirus or related topics, how easy or difficult is it for you to… | |||||
| 10. Decide if the information you find is applicable to you? | 0.35 | ||||
| 11. Apply the information you found in your daily life? | 0.56 | ||||
| 12. Use the information you found to make decisions about your health (e.g., protective measures, hygiene regulations, transmission routes, risks, and their prevention? | 0.58 | ||||
| Privacy protection dimension | |||||
| When you post a message (on a forum, social network) about coronavirus or similar topics, how often… | |||||
| 13. Do you find it difficult to judge who can read along? | 0.28 | ||||
| 14. Do you share (intentionally or unintentionally) your own private information (e.g., name or address)? | 0.66 | ||||
| 15. Do you share (intentionally or unintentionally) someone else’s private information? | 0.67 | ||||
| Eigenvalue | 4.81 | 1.58 | 1.48 | 1.05 | 0.90 |
| Percentage of variance | 15.84 | 13.57 | 13.51 | 12.62 | 9.89 |
a The scale and the dimensions of the scale with their respective questions correspond to the English version of the original DHLI questionnaire designed by Dadaczynski, Okan, and Rathmann [9].
Construct validity of the DHLI scale translated into Spanish with the Spearman correlation.
| Variable | Rho (ρ) | |
|---|---|---|
| Age | 0.09 | <0.001 |
| Subjective social perception | 0.09 | <0.001 |
| Sense of coherence | 0.18 | <0.001 |
| Anxiety about the future | −0.23 | <0.001 |
| Well-being on the last two weeks | 0.18 | <0.001 |
Figure 1Digital health literacy scores according to the characteristics of the sample. Box plot corresponded to the score of digital literacy on COVID-19 according to the characteristics of sex, age, country of residence, study area (Eng. & Tech. = Engineering sciences and technologies; Health Sc. = Life sciences and health; Basic Sc. = Basic Science; Social Sc. = Social sciences and humanities), level of education, satisfaction with the information on COVID-19, and the presence of chronic disease in the student (No Cron. Cond = no chronic disease; Cron. Cond. = chronic disease). Next to each category were placed the p values obtained by the Kruskall–Wallis non-parametric test (Ref = reference).