van Boekel Leonieke C, Peek Sebastiaan Tm, Luijkx Katrien G
Tilburg School of Social and Behavioral Sciences, Department Tranzo, Tilburg University, Tilburg, Netherlands.
J Med Internet Res. 2017 May 24;19(5):e180. doi: 10.2196/jmir.6853.
As for all individuals, the Internet is important in the everyday life of older adults. Research on older adults' use of the Internet has merely focused on users versus nonusers and consequences of Internet use and nonuse. Older adults are a heterogeneous group, which may implicate that their use of the Internet is diverse as well. Older adults can use the Internet for different activities, and this usage can be of influence on benefits the Internet can have for them.
The aim of this paper was to describe the diversity or heterogeneity in the activities for which older adults use the Internet and determine whether diversity is related to social or health-related variables.
We used data of a national representative Internet panel in the Netherlands. Panel members aged 65 years and older and who have access to and use the Internet were selected (N=1418). We conducted a latent class analysis based on the Internet activities that panel members reported to spend time on. Second, we described the identified clusters with descriptive statistics and compared the clusters using analysis of variance (ANOVA) and chi-square tests.
Four clusters were distinguished. Cluster 1 was labeled as the "practical users" (36.88%, n=523). These respondents mainly used the Internet for practical and financial purposes such as searching for information, comparing products, and banking. Respondents in Cluster 2, the "minimizers" (32.23%, n=457), reported lowest frequency on most Internet activities, are older (mean age 73 years), and spent the smallest time on the Internet. Cluster 3 was labeled as the "maximizers" (17.77%, n=252); these respondents used the Internet for various activities, spent most time on the Internet, and were relatively younger (mean age below 70 years). Respondents in Cluster 4, the "social users," mainly used the Internet for social and leisure-related activities such as gaming and social network sites. The identified clusters significantly differed in age (P<.001, ω=0.07), time spent on the Internet (P<.001, ω=0.12), and frequency of downloading apps (P<.001, ω=0.14), with medium to large effect sizes. Social and health-related variables were significantly different between the clusters, except social and emotional loneliness. However, effect sizes were small. The minimizers scored significantly lower on psychological well-being, instrumental activities of daily living (iADL), and experienced health compared with the practical users and maximizers.
Older adults are a diverse group in terms of their activities on the Internet. This underlines the importance to look beyond use versus nonuse when studying older adults' Internet use. The clusters we have identified in this study can help tailor the development and deployment of eHealth intervention to specific segments of the older population.
对于所有人来说,互联网在老年人的日常生活中都很重要。关于老年人使用互联网的研究仅仅集中在用户与非用户以及使用和不使用互联网的后果上。老年人是一个异质性群体,这可能意味着他们使用互联网的方式也多种多样。老年人可以将互联网用于不同的活动,而这种使用方式可能会影响互联网对他们的益处。
本文旨在描述老年人使用互联网的活动的多样性或异质性,并确定这种多样性是否与社会或健康相关变量有关。
我们使用了荷兰一个全国代表性互联网小组的数据。选取了65岁及以上且能够访问并使用互联网的小组成员(N = 1418)。我们基于小组成员报告花费时间的互联网活动进行了潜在类别分析。其次,我们用描述性统计描述了所识别出的类别,并使用方差分析(ANOVA)和卡方检验对这些类别进行比较。
区分出了四个类别。类别1被标记为“实用型用户”(36.88%,n = 523)。这些受访者主要将互联网用于实用和金融目的,如搜索信息、比较产品和银行业务。类别2的受访者为“最低限度使用者”(32.23%,n = 457),他们在大多数互联网活动上的频率最低,年龄较大(平均年龄73岁),在互联网上花费的时间最少。类别3被标记为“最大化使用者”(17.77%,n = 252);这些受访者将互联网用于各种活动,在互联网上花费的时间最多,且相对年轻(平均年龄低于70岁)。类别4的受访者为“社交型用户”,主要将互联网用于社交和休闲相关活动,如游戏和社交网站。所识别出的类别在年龄(P <.001,ω = 0.07)、在互联网上花费的时间(P <.001,ω = 0.12)和下载应用程序的频率(P <.001,ω = 0.14)方面存在显著差异,效应大小为中等至较大。除了社交和情感孤独感外,社会和健康相关变量在不同类别之间存在显著差异。然而,效应大小较小。与实用型用户和最大化使用者相比,最低限度使用者在心理健康、日常生活工具性活动(iADL)和健康体验方面的得分显著较低。
就老年人在互联网上的活动而言,他们是一个多样化的群体。这凸显了在研究老年人使用互联网时,超越使用与不使用的重要性。我们在本研究中识别出的类别有助于针对老年人群体的特定细分领域定制电子健康干预措施的开发和部署。