韩国老年人电子健康素养的社会数字决定因素及其对健康结果和电子健康使用的相关影响:基于社区的横断面调查。

IF 5 Q1 GERIATRICS & GERONTOLOGY
JMIR Aging Pub Date : 2024-08-13 DOI:10.2196/56061
Myat Yadana Kyaw, Myo Nyein Aung, Yuka Koyanagi, Saiyud Moolphate, Thin Nyein Nyein Aung, Hok Ka Carol Ma, Hocheol Lee, Hae-Kweun Nam, Eun Woo Nam, Motoyuki Yuasa
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引用次数: 0

摘要

背景:电子健康素养是获取电子健康信息的一项基本技能,对于健康需求随年龄增长而增加的老年人来说尤其如此。韩国目前正处于社会快速数字化和人口老龄化日益加剧的交汇点上。电子健康素养使老年人能够最大限度地有效利用新兴数字技术来促进健康和提高生活质量。了解韩国老年人的电子健康素养对于消除灰色数字鸿沟和健康信息获取的不平等至关重要:本研究旨在调查影响韩国老年人电子健康素养的因素及其对健康结果和电子健康使用的影响:这是一项横断面调查。调查对象包括韩国 2 个城市 65 岁及以上居住在社区的老年人。采用顺序逻辑回归分析与电子健康素养相关的因素,并采用多变量方差分析分析电子健康素养对健康结果和电子健康使用的影响:共对434名参与者进行了分析。共有 22.3%(97/434)的参与者具有较高的电子健康知识水平。年龄的增长、月收入的提高以及上网时间的增加与电子健康素养显著相关(结论:社会经济地位与电子健康素养之间存在差异:社会经济地位以及使用互联网和社交媒体方面的差异会导致不同水平的电子健康知识技能,从而对健康结果和电子健康的使用产生影响。基于电子健康素养的社会和数字决定因素而量身定制的电子健康干预措施可促进老年人获取电子健康信息,并促进数字包容性健康老龄化社区的发展。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Sociodigital Determinants of eHealth Literacy and Related Impact on Health Outcomes and eHealth Use in Korean Older Adults: Community-Based Cross-Sectional Survey.

Background: eHealth literacy is an essential skill for pursuing electronic health information, particularly for older people whose health needs increase with age. South Korea is now at the intersection of a rapidly digitalizing society and an increasingly aged population. eHealth literacy enables older people to maximize the effective use of emerging digital technology for their health and quality of life. Understanding the eHealth literacy of Korean older adults is critical to eliminating the gray digital divide and inequity in health information access.

Objective: This study aims to investigate factors influencing eHealth literacy in older Korean adults and its impact on health outcomes and eHealth use.

Methods: This was a cross-sectional survey. Community-dwelling older adults 65 years and older in 2 urban cities in South Korea were included. eHealth literacy was measured by the eHealth Literacy Scale. Ordinal logistic regression was used to analyze factors associated with eHealth literacy and multivariate ANOVA for the impact of eHealth literacy on health outcomes and eHealth use.

Results: In total, 434 participants were analyzed. A total of 22.3% (97/434) of participants had high eHealth literacy skills. Increasing age, higher monthly income, and time spent on the internet were significantly associated with eHealth literacy (P<.001), and social media users were 3.97 times (adjusted odds ratio 3.97, 95% CI 1.02-15.43; P=.04) more likely to have higher skill. Higher eHealth literacy was associated with better self-perceived health and frequent use of digital technologies for accessing health and care services (P<.001).

Conclusions: Disparity in socioeconomic status and engagement on the internet and social media can result in different levels of eHealth literacy skills, which can have consequential impacts on health outcomes and eHealth use. Tailored eHealth interventions, grounded on the social and digital determinants of eHealth literacy, could facilitate eHealth information access among older adults and foster a digitally inclusive healthy aging community.

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来源期刊
JMIR Aging
JMIR Aging Social Sciences-Health (social science)
CiteScore
6.50
自引率
4.10%
发文量
71
审稿时长
12 weeks
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