| Literature DB >> 35749210 |
Reem El Sherif1, Pierre Pluye1, Fidelia Ibekwe2.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: High-quality online health information (OHI) can reduce unnecessary visits to health professionals and improve health. One of the ways that people use OHI is to support others with health conditions through proxy OHI seeking. Members of a person's social circle may help them overcome information-seeking barriers and illness challenges. There are several models on proxy information seeking. Yet, we know little about the use and outcomes of OHI on behalf of someone else.Entities:
Keywords: health information; information outcomes; information seeking behavior; online health information; online information; proxy information seeking; social support; surrogate seekers
Mesh:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35749210 PMCID: PMC9270707 DOI: 10.2196/34345
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Med Internet Res ISSN: 1438-8871 Impact factor: 7.076
Figure 1Online health information (OHI) outcomes conceptual framework.
Inclusion and exclusion criteria.
|
| Inclusion criteria | Exclusion criteria |
| Research methods | Primary and secondary research (ie, qualitative, quantitative, and mixed methods empirical studies and literature reviews) | Not empirical research or a literature review (eg, commentary, editorials, reports) |
| OHIa |
Focus on online health information seeking Online resource about health and medical topics |
No mention of OHI Offline health information resources (eg, books or pamphlets) Studies that tested specific online interventions (eg, testing the use of an e-kiosk or e-mental health services) |
| Proxy OHI seeking | Explore the phenomenon of proxy OHI seeking: Characteristics of proxy seekers Context of proxy OHI seeking Use of OHI Outcomes of OHI |
No mention of proxy OHI seeking No mention of seekers that are physical members of the social circle that the person knows and is in contact with on a regular or semi-regular basis (eg, anonymous social media or online forum members) Exclude parents of young children or surrogate decision-makers of incapacitated adults (eg, unconscious patients in an ICUb) |
aOHI: online health information.
bICU: intensive care unit.
Search strategy.
| Database | Date of latest search | Search terms | Records, n |
| Medline | May 20, 2021 | *social support/ AND online.mp. AND “Health Information”.af. | 82 |
| “informational support”.mp. AND online.mp. AND “Health Information”.af. | 14 | ||
| CINAHL | May 20, 2021 | “online health information” AND “social support” | 16 |
| “online health information” AND “informational support” | 5 | ||
| PsycInfo | May 20, 2021 | *social support/ AND online.mp. AND “Health Information”.af. | 141 |
| “informational support”.mp. AND online.mp. AND “Health Information”.af. | 36 | ||
| LISA | May 20, 2021 | “proxy” AND “information seeking” AND “online health” | 54 |
| “social support” AND “online health” AND Information | 294 | ||
| Scopus | May 20, 2021 | “surrogate” or “proxy” AND “information seeking” AND “online health” | 25 |
| mediator AND “online health information” | 118 |
Figure 2PRISMA (Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic Reviews and Meta-Analyses) flow diagram.
Information needs and triggers of proxy seeking.
| Code | Excerpt |
| Explicit request | “The carer may be asked to search for information on behalf of the person with cancer. This mostly occurs in situations where the patient does not have access to the internet or is not internet savvy or the person with cancer finds they are too ill to search.” [ |
| To make a decision | “Both patients and caregivers also mentioned that they surfed the internet again at specific moments later during the lung cancer treatment trajectory, such as during chemotherapy, at the appearance of new symptoms or disease progression, or when having to make a choice between 2 treatment options.” [ |
| To support someone with a health condition | “A high percentage of the 795 caregivers (87%) had used [the] internet to search for information about the disease of the patient they were taking care for in the last year prior to the survey.” [ |
| Out of interest or obligation | “For Gina, a 26-year-old Chinese participant, her role as a granddaughter constitutes her interpretation of HISa as she mostly seeks out information for her grandparents. Jamila, a 37-year-old Malay woman, seeks out health information from the internet when one of her family members is not feeling well.” [ |
| Following a health care practitioner visit | “Patients and caregivers mentioned that their need to seek information often arose once they had time to rest and think about what they had been told, often at a time when their questions could not directly be answered by the treating specialist anymore: ‘Once you have come home, you have forgotten half of what you have been told, which is exactly the moment you would want to ask something.’” [ |
| Coping mechanism | “Carers also tended to act as ‘gatekeepers’ of information, and constantly sought new information as a means of coping.” [ |
aHIS: health information seeker.
Figure 3Outcomes of proxy online health information (OHI) seeking framework.