Skinner Harvey, Biscope Sherry, Poland Blake, Goldberg Eudice
Department of Public Health Sciences, Faculty of Medicine, University of Toronto, Toronto, ON, Canada.
J Med Internet Res. 2003 Dec 18;5(4):e32. doi: 10.2196/jmir.5.4.e32.
Adolescents present many challenges in providing them effective preventive services and health care. Yet, they are typically the early adopters of new technology (eg, the Internet). This creates important opportunities for engaging youths via eHealth.
To describe how adolescents use technology for their health-information needs, identify the challenges they face, and highlight some emerging roles of health professionals regarding eHealth services for adolescents.
Using an inductive qualitative research design, 27 focus groups were conducted in Ontario, Canada. The 210 participants (55% female, 45% male; median age 16 years) were selected to reflect diversity in age, sex, geographic location, cultural identity, and risk. An 8-person team analyzed and coded the data according to major themes.
Study participants most-frequently sought or distributed information related to school (89%), interacting with friends (85%), social concerns (85%), specific medical conditions (67%), body image and nutrition (63%), violence and personal safety (59%), and sexual health (56%). Finding personally-relevant, high-quality information was a pivotal challenge that has ramifications on the depth and types of information that adolescents can find to answer their health questions. Privacy in accessing information technology was a second key challenge. Participants reported using technologies that clustered into 4 domains along a continuum from highly-interactive to fixed information sources: (1) personal communication: telephone, cell phone, and pager; (2) social communication: e-mail, instant messaging, chat, and bulletin boards; (3) interactive environments: Web sites, search engines, and computers; and (4) unidirectional sources: television, radio, and print. Three emerging roles for health professionals in eHealth include: (1) providing an interface for adolescents with technology and assisting them in finding pertinent information sources; (2) enhancing connection to youths by extending ways and times when practitioners are available; and (3) fostering critical appraisal skills among youths for evaluating the quality of health information.
This study helps illuminate adolescent health-information needs, their use of information technologies, and emerging roles for health professionals. The findings can inform the design and more-effective use of eHealth applications for adolescent populations.
在为青少年提供有效的预防服务和医疗保健方面存在诸多挑战。然而,他们通常是新技术(如互联网)的早期采用者。这为通过电子健康吸引青少年创造了重要机遇。
描述青少年如何利用技术满足其健康信息需求,识别他们面临的挑战,并突出健康专业人员在为青少年提供电子健康服务方面的一些新角色。
采用归纳性定性研究设计,在加拿大安大略省进行了27个焦点小组访谈。选取了210名参与者(55%为女性,45%为男性;中位年龄16岁),以反映年龄、性别、地理位置、文化身份和风险方面的多样性。一个8人团队根据主要主题对数据进行了分析和编码。
研究参与者最常寻求或传播与学校相关的信息(89%)、与朋友互动(85%)、社会问题(85%)、特定医疗状况(67%)、身体形象和营养(63%)、暴力和个人安全(59%)以及性健康(56%)。找到与个人相关的高质量信息是一个关键挑战,这对青少年能够找到以回答其健康问题的信息的深度和类型产生影响。获取信息技术时的隐私是第二个关键挑战。参与者报告使用的技术可沿着从高度互动到固定信息源的连续体分为4个领域:(1)个人通信:电话、手机和传呼机;(2)社交通信:电子邮件、即时通讯、聊天和公告板;(3)互动环境:网站、搜索引擎和计算机;(4)单向信息源:电视、广播和印刷品。健康专业人员在电子健康方面的三个新角色包括:(1)为青少年提供与技术的接口,并协助他们找到相关信息源;(2)通过扩展从业者可提供服务的方式和时间来加强与青少年的联系;(3)培养青少年评估健康信息质量的批判性评价技能。
本研究有助于阐明青少年的健康信息需求、他们对信息技术的使用以及健康专业人员的新角色。研究结果可为针对青少年群体的电子健康应用的设计和更有效使用提供参考。