美国成年人在社交媒体上的经验和对谁应负责减少与健康有关的虚假信息的看法的年龄差异:一项全国调查的二次分析。

IF 5 Q1 GERIATRICS & GERONTOLOGY
JMIR Aging Pub Date : 2024-11-27 DOI:10.2196/56761
Prathyusha Galinkala, Elise Atkinson, Celeste Campos-Castillo
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引用次数: 0

摘要

背景介绍我们生活在一个数字时代,社交媒体已成为人们生活中不可或缺的一部分。它也是传播与健康有关的虚假信息的主要平台之一。本研究探讨了不同年龄段的成年人认为谁应负责减少社交媒体上与健康有关的虚假信息:尽管人们越来越关注老年人在社交媒体上接触虚假健康信息的问题,但很少有研究探讨他们对如何解决这一问题的看法。本研究探讨了美国成年人的年龄与他们所报告的社交媒体上与健康有关的虚假信息的经历之间的关系,以及他们对谁应负责减少此类虚假信息的看法:本研究是对 2022 年健康信息全国趋势调查数据的二次分析,该调查是一项针对美国成年人(18 岁及以上)的具有全国代表性的调查。多变量逻辑回归估计了受访者的年龄与他们自我报告的社交媒体使用情况、他们发现社交媒体上与健康有关的虚假信息的难度、他们与医疗服务提供者讨论社交媒体上发现的健康信息的情况,以及他们对谁应该负责减少社交媒体上与健康有关的虚假信息的看法之间的关系。回归估计值根据受访者的社会人口学和健康特征进行了调整:受访者的日常社交媒体使用率随着年龄的增长而降低。年龄在 50-64 岁(b=0.515,P=.01)和 65-74 岁(b=0.697,P=.002)的受访者比年龄在 18-34 岁的受访者更有可能表示,他们非常同意自己很难发现社交媒体上与健康有关的虚假信息。与年轻人相比,老年人(65-74 岁:b=0.818,P=.002;75 岁及以上:b=1.058,PConclusions:除了社交媒体平台不断努力检测和删除虚假信息外,研究结果还表明,医疗服务提供者应承担起消除社交媒体上与老年人健康相关的虚假信息的任务。然而,临床访问的时间是有限的。未来的研究需要探索适合老年人的新方法和新工具,以协助过滤和消除社交媒体上与健康相关的虚假信息。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Age Variation Among US Adults' Social Media Experiences and Beliefs About Who Is Responsible for Reducing Health-Related Falsehoods: Secondary Analysis of a National Survey.

Background: We live in a digital age where social media has become an essential part of people's lives. It is also one of the leading platforms responsible for spreading health-related falsehoods. This study explores who adults of different age groups perceive as responsible for reducing health-related falsehoods on social media.

Objective: Despite growing concern over older adults' exposure to false health information on social media, little research examines their beliefs on how to address the problem. This study examines how the age of US adults is associated with their reported experiences with health-related falsehoods on social media and their beliefs about who should be tasked with reducing such falsehoods.

Methods: This study is a secondary analysis of data from the 2022 Health Information National Trends Survey, a nationally representative survey of US adults (18 years and older). Multivariable logistic regressions estimated how a respondent's age was associated with their self-reported social media use, their difficulty to detect health-related falsehoods on social media, their discussion of health information found on social media with medical providers, and their beliefs regarding who should be responsible for reducing health-related falsehoods on social media. Regression estimates were adjusted for respondents' sociodemographic and health characteristics.

Results: Daily social media use decreased with respondents' age. Respondents aged 50-64 years (b=0.515, P=.01) and 65-74 years (b=0.697, P=.002) were more likely than respondents aged 18-34 years to report they strongly agree that it is difficult for them to detect health-related falsehoods on social media. Compared to younger adults, older adults (65-74 years: b=0.818, P=.002; 75 years and older: b=1.058, P<.001) were more likely to believe medical providers should be responsible for reducing online falsehoods.

Conclusions: In addition to ongoing efforts by social media platforms to detect and remove falsehoods, the findings suggest medical providers should be tasked with discrediting health-related falsehoods on social media for older adults. However, time during the clinical visit is limited. Future research is needed to discover new approaches and tools tailored to older adults to assist with filtering and discrediting health-related falsehoods on social media.

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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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