Department of Oncology, Wayne State University/Karmanos Cancer Institute.
School of Information Sciences, Wayne State University.
Health Commun. 2020 Mar;35(3):350-355. doi: 10.1080/10410236.2018.1563031. Epub 2019 Jan 2.
eHealth is a promising resource for cancer survivors and may contribute to reducing racial disparities in cancer survivorship. This research applies the Unified Theory of Acceptance and Use of Technology (UTAUT) to examine eHealth activity among African American (AfAm) and White cancer survivors. In a population-based sample of AfAm and White survivors ( = 300), a Poisson regression tested whether UTAUT constructs (facilitating conditions, social influence, perceived ease of use, perceived usefulness) and beliefs about security/trustworthiness of eHealth were associated with the number of eHealth activities respondents had used. To test whether the effects varied across racial groups, interactions between each of these five facets and survivor race were included in the model. The model adjusted for demographic characteristics, cancer history, and internet access and use. Across racial groups, facilitating conditions (IRR = 1.44, 95%CI [1.17, 1.77]) and perceived usefulness (IRR = 1.16, 95%CI [1.08, 1.24]) were associated with increased eHealth activity. A marginally significant interaction between race and perceived ease of use (IRR = 1.17, 95%CI [0.99, 1.39]) indicated this perception was associated with decreased eHealth activity for White but not AfAm survivors. A significant interaction between race and perceived security/trustworthiness (IRR = 1.16, 95%CI [1.02, 1.32]) indicated this perception was associated with increased eHealth activity for AfAm but not White survivors. Social influence was not associated with eHealth use for either group (IRR = 1.07, 95%CI [0.98, 1.16]). Interventions targeting attitudes about eHealth may encourage its adoption and use. Furthermore, eHealth tools intended for use among AfAm cancer survivors should ensure they are secure and emphasize trustworthiness to intended users.
电子健康是癌症幸存者的一个有前途的资源,可能有助于减少癌症幸存者中的种族差异。本研究应用统一接受和使用技术理论(UTAUT)来检验非裔美国人和白人癌症幸存者的电子健康活动。在一个基于人群的非裔美国人和白人幸存者样本中(= 300),泊松回归检验了 UTAUT 结构(促进条件、社会影响、感知易用性、感知有用性)和对电子健康安全性/可信度的信念是否与受访者使用的电子健康活动数量相关。为了检验这些效果是否因种族群体而异,在模型中包含了这五个方面中的每一个与幸存者种族之间的相互作用。该模型调整了人口统计学特征、癌症史和互联网接入和使用情况。在所有种族群体中,促进条件(IRR=1.44,95%CI [1.17, 1.77])和感知有用性(IRR=1.16,95%CI [1.08, 1.24])与增加电子健康活动相关。种族和感知易用性之间的边缘显著相互作用(IRR=1.17,95%CI [0.99, 1.39])表明,这种看法与白人幸存者的电子健康活动减少有关,但与非裔美国幸存者无关。种族和感知安全性/可信度之间的显著相互作用(IRR=1.16,95%CI [1.02, 1.32])表明,这种看法与非裔美国幸存者的电子健康活动增加有关,但与白人幸存者无关。社会影响与两组人群的电子健康使用均无关(IRR=1.07,95%CI [0.98, 1.16])。针对电子健康态度的干预措施可能会鼓励其采用和使用。此外,针对非裔美国癌症幸存者的电子健康工具应确保其安全性并强调对预期用户的可信度。