Department of Community Medicine, Mercer University School of Medicine, Columbus, GA, United States.
College of Communication and Information Sciences, The University of Alabama, Tuscaloosa, AL, United States.
J Med Internet Res. 2022 May 30;24(5):e32723. doi: 10.2196/32723.
Many patients with chronic medical conditions search the internet to obtain medical advice and health information to improve their health condition and quality of life. Diabetes is a common chronic disease that disproportionately affects different race and ethnicity groups in the United States. In the existing literature on the popularity of internet health information seeking among persons with a chronic medical condition, there are limited data on US adults living with diabetes.
This study aims to examine the factors associated with internet health information seeking among US adults living with diabetes and whether there is a disparity in internet health information seeking stratified by race and ethnicity.
We conducted a cross-sectional study using the Health Information National Trends Survey data from 2017 to 2020. We selected our study sample based on respondents' reports on whether they were told they had diabetes, and our primary outcome was internet health information-seeking behavior. We used 2 multivariable logistic regression models to examine the effects of sociodemographic factors and other covariates on the internet health information-seeking behavior of adults with diabetes. Jackknife replicate weights were used to provide bias-corrected variance estimates.
Our study sample included 2903 adults who self-reported that they had diabetes. In total, 60.08% (1744/2903) were non-Hispanic White individuals, 46.88% (1336/2850) were men, and 64% (1812/2831) had some college or graduate education. The prevalence of internet health information seeking in this population was 64.49% (1872/2903), and the main factors associated with internet health information seeking included education level (some college vs less than high school: odds ratio [OR] 1.42, 95% CI 1.44-1.88; and college graduate or higher vs less than high school: OR 2.50, 95% CI 1.79-3.50), age (age group ≥65 years vs age group 18-44 years: OR 0.46, 95% CI 0.34-0.63), and household income level (P<.001). In addition, we found significant differences in the effects of predictors stratified by race.
The findings from this study suggest that internet health information seeking is common among US adults living with diabetes. Internet health information could influence the relationship between health care providers and adults living with diabetes and improve their self-management and quality of life.
许多患有慢性疾病的患者上网搜索医学建议和健康信息,以改善他们的健康状况和生活质量。糖尿病是一种常见的慢性病,在美国不同种族和族裔群体中的发病率不成比例。在现有的关于慢性病患者上网搜索健康信息的流行情况的文献中,关于美国患有糖尿病的成年人上网搜索健康信息的相关数据有限。
本研究旨在探讨与美国患有糖尿病的成年人上网搜索健康信息相关的因素,以及是否存在按种族和族裔分层的上网搜索健康信息的差异。
我们使用 2017 年至 2020 年期间的健康信息国家趋势调查数据进行了一项横断面研究。我们根据受访者报告的是否被告知患有糖尿病来选择我们的研究样本,我们的主要结局是成年人上网搜索健康信息的行为。我们使用 2 个多变量逻辑回归模型来研究社会人口统计学因素和其他协变量对成年人糖尿病患者上网搜索健康信息行为的影响。使用 Jackknife 复制权重来提供偏倚校正的方差估计。
我们的研究样本包括 2903 名自我报告患有糖尿病的成年人。共有 60.08%(1744/2903)为非西班牙裔白人,46.88%(1336/2850)为男性,64%(1812/2831)具有一定的大学或研究生教育水平。该人群中上网搜索健康信息的比例为 64.49%(1872/2903),与上网搜索健康信息相关的主要因素包括教育程度(大学或研究生教育 vs 低于高中学历:比值比[OR]1.42,95%置信区间[CI]1.44-1.88;和大学毕业或更高学历 vs 低于高中学历:OR 2.50,95% CI 1.79-3.50)、年龄(年龄组≥65 岁 vs 年龄组 18-44 岁:OR 0.46,95% CI 0.34-0.63)和家庭收入水平(P<.001)。此外,我们还发现按种族分层的预测因素的影响存在显著差异。
本研究结果表明,上网搜索健康信息在患有糖尿病的美国成年人中很常见。互联网健康信息可能会影响医疗保健提供者与患有糖尿病的成年人之间的关系,并改善他们的自我管理和生活质量。