Hansen Anne Helen, Claudi Tor, Årsand Eirik
Centre for Quality Improvement and Development, University Hospital of North Norway, Tromsø, Norway.
Department of Community Medicine, Faculty of Health Sciences, UiT-The Arctic University of Norway, Tromsø, Norway.
J Med Internet Res. 2019 Apr 26;21(4):e13678. doi: 10.2196/13678.
Despite the increasing prevalence of diabetes and increasing use of electronic health (eHealth) among people with diabetes, little is known about the association between the use of eHealth and the use of provider-based health services.
The objective of this study was to investigate whether the use of eHealth might change patients' decisions regarding doctor-seeking behavior and whether information acquired from the internet was discussed with a doctor.
We used email survey data collected in 2018 from members of the Norwegian Diabetes Association (aged 18 to 89 years) diagnosed with diabetes. Using logistic regressions, we studied patients' internet-triggered changes in decisions regarding doctor visits; whether they discussed information from the internet with a doctor; and whether these topics were associated with gender, age, education, self-rated health, and self-reported anxiety/depression.
Among the 895 informants, 75.4% (645/856) had never made an internet-triggered change of decision in any direction regarding visiting a doctor, whereas 16.4% (41/859) had decided to visit and 17.3% (148/856) had decided not to visit. The probability of changing decisions decreased with higher age and increased with the severity of self-reported anxiety/depression. Around half of the study participants (448/858, 52.2%) had never discussed information from the internet with a doctor. The probability of discussing internet information with a doctor was higher for those in bad/very bad self-rated health (odds ratio 2.12, CI 1.15-3.90) and for those with moderate self-reported anxiety/depression (odds ratio 2.30, CI 1.30-4.10).
Our findings suggest that using eHealth has a significant impact on doctor-visiting decisions among people with diabetes, especially among people aged 18 to 39 years and among those reporting anxiety/depression. It is of great importance that the information posted is of high quality and that the large differences between internet-users regarding age as well as mental and somatic health status are taken into account. More research is needed to confirm and further explore the findings of this study.
尽管糖尿病的患病率不断上升,且糖尿病患者对电子健康(eHealth)的使用也日益增加,但对于eHealth的使用与基于医疗机构的医疗服务利用之间的关联,我们却知之甚少。
本研究的目的是调查使用eHealth是否会改变患者寻求医疗行为的决策,以及从互联网获取的信息是否会与医生讨论。
我们使用了2018年从挪威糖尿病协会(年龄在18至89岁之间)被诊断患有糖尿病的成员那里收集的电子邮件调查数据。通过逻辑回归,我们研究了患者因互联网触发而在就诊决策上的变化;他们是否与医生讨论过从互联网获取的信息;以及这些话题是否与性别、年龄、教育程度、自评健康状况和自我报告的焦虑/抑郁有关。
在895名受访者中,75.4%(645/856)在任何方向上从未因互联网触发而改变过就诊决策,而16.4%(41/859)决定就诊,17.3%(148/856)决定不就诊。随着年龄的增长,改变决策的可能性降低,而随着自我报告的焦虑/抑郁严重程度的增加而增加。大约一半(448/858,52.2%)的研究参与者从未与医生讨论过从互联网获取的信息。自评健康状况为差/非常差的人(优势比2.12,CI 1.15 - 3.90)以及自我报告有中度焦虑/抑郁的人(优势比2.30,CI 1.30 - 4.10)与医生讨论互联网信息的可能性更高。
我们的研究结果表明,使用eHealth对糖尿病患者的就诊决策有显著影响,尤其是在18至39岁的人群以及报告有焦虑/抑郁的人群中。发布的信息质量高以及考虑到互联网用户在年龄以及心理和躯体健康状况方面的巨大差异非常重要。需要更多研究来证实并进一步探索本研究的结果。