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低收入国家在线健康消费者的 COVID-19 信息相关数字素养。

COVID-19 information-related digital literacy among online health consumers in a low-income country.

机构信息

School of Nursing, University of British Columbia, T201-2211 Westbrook Mall, Vancouver, BC, Canada.

Department of Laboratory Technology, University of Cape Coast, Ghana.

出版信息

Int J Med Inform. 2021 Jan;145:104322. doi: 10.1016/j.ijmedinf.2020.104322. Epub 2020 Nov 1.

Abstract

BACKGROUND

The internet has become an important source of health information among people across the globe. However, the novel coronavirus outbreak has led to a broader dissemination of fake and misleading health information. While health professionals may be able to critically evaluate internet-based information, the skills at finding, appraising, and using COVID-19-related online information may be problematic for laypeople in low-income countries. The purpose of this study was to examine the digital literacy of lay consumers of online COVID-19-related information in Ghana.

METHOD

A cross-sectional survey was conducted among online health consumers across five regions in Ghana. Participants were conveniently recruited through social media, and the survey was based on the eHealth Literacy Scale (eHeals) and administered through Qualtrics software. We calculated the overall mean eHeals score to determine the literacy levels and performed descriptive statistics to describe the characteristics of the sample. Linear regression analysis was performed to determine the factors associated with respondents' digital literacy.

RESULT

Out of 700 respondents sent with a survey link, 325 responded (46.4 % response rate). The majority of the respondents were: younger than 31 years (M = 28.42, SD = 6.98), males (59.7 %), use the internet daily (94.4 %), engaged in social media activities (65 %), and frequently search the internet for information related to COVID-19. The overall eHealth literacy was quite high (M = 4.01, SD = 0.95), but respondents' scores on items 1 and 6 were relatively low. Sex, age, frequently searching the internet for COVID-19 information, using the internet for educational purposes, and having a little/adequate knowledge of COVID-19 was predictive of digital literacy.

CONCLUSION

The study revealed a high overall digital literacy as well as sex and age differences in literacy levels among online health consumers in Ghana. However, respondents' ability to locate COVID-19 related informaion and their skills in differentiating scientific from unscientific internet-based information remain relatively low. These findings offer useful insight that can inform the design of inclusive internet-based preventive resources that would be accessible and understandable to laypeople across all age groups and sexes in low-income countries.

摘要

背景

互联网已成为全球民众获取健康信息的重要来源。然而,新冠病毒疫情的爆发导致虚假和误导性健康信息更广泛地传播。虽然健康专业人员可能能够批判性地评估基于互联网的信息,但在低收入国家,寻找、评估和使用与新冠病毒相关的在线信息的技能对于非专业人士来说可能存在问题。本研究旨在考察加纳在线新冠病毒相关信息的非专业消费者的数字素养。

方法

在加纳五个地区通过社交媒体对在线健康消费者进行了横断面调查。参与者是通过方便抽样招募的,调查基于电子健康素养量表(eHeals),并通过 Qualtrics 软件进行管理。我们计算了整体 eHeals 平均分来确定文化水平,并进行描述性统计以描述样本的特征。进行线性回归分析以确定与受访者数字素养相关的因素。

结果

在向 700 名发送调查链接的受访者中,有 325 人做出了回应(46.4%的回应率)。大多数受访者为:年龄小于 31 岁(M=28.42,SD=6.98),男性(59.7%),每天上网(94.4%),参与社交媒体活动(65%),经常上网搜索与新冠病毒相关的信息。整体电子健康素养水平相当高(M=4.01,SD=0.95),但受访者在项目 1 和 6 的得分相对较低。性别、年龄、经常上网搜索新冠病毒信息、上网用于教育目的以及对新冠病毒有一定/足够的了解与数字素养相关。

结论

该研究表明,加纳在线健康消费者的整体数字素养较高,但在文化水平方面存在性别和年龄差异。然而,受访者查找与新冠病毒相关信息的能力以及他们区分基于互联网的科学与非科学信息的技能仍然相对较低。这些发现提供了有用的见解,可以为设计包容性的基于互联网的预防资源提供信息,这些资源对于低收入国家的所有年龄组和性别群体的非专业人士来说都是可访问和可理解的。

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