Department of Pharmacy, School of Life Sciences, Pharmacy and Chemistry, Kingston University London, Kingston upon Thames, Surrey KT1 1LQ, UK.
Int J Environ Res Public Health. 2023 Jan 13;20(2):1472. doi: 10.3390/ijerph20021472.
Introduction: Advances in information and communication technology (ICT) and post-COVID-19 tectonic changes in healthcare delivery have made it possible for cancer survivors to obtain disease-related information for remote management online rather than through healthcare providers. To comprehend and evaluate health information, digital literacy is crucial. Objectives: This study examined cancer survivors’ information-seeking behaviour, information sources, digital health literacy, and digital trends, as well as potential determinants of e-health information receptivity and online resource use. Methods: A national 30-item cross-sectional survey using a representative random sample of cancer survivors from Jordan’s cancer registry was conducted. Chi-square tests established categorical variable relationships. Using the mean and standard deviation, we calculated the Likert scale’s ordinal data average. A p-value < 0.05 was statistically significant. Logistic regression identified predictors of interest in late-trajectory information acquisition and use of e-health platforms (apps, portals) for cancer self-management. Results: Lower digital literacy and electronic searching were associated with older age and lower income, education, and employment status (p ≤ 0.001). Digital literacy independently predicted m-health app use for remote management and interest in cancer supportive care information. Digitally literate survivors preferred the use of digital platforms (p ≤ 0.001). Information acquisition barriers included “reliability” (26%, n = 25) and “health information trustworthiness” (16.2%, n = 25). Following treatment completion, Internet-seeking behaviour decreased significantly when compared to the early cancer trajectory. Conclusion: Our findings imply that Jordanian cancer survivors’ low digital literacy may hinder information acquisition and technology-enabled cancer care. Digital interventions for cancer survivors should be adaptable to varying levels of digital health literacy. Healthcare policymakers should recognise digital inequities and devise focused initiatives to bridge the digital divide while responding to the urgent need to digitalise cancer care delivery.
信息和通信技术(ICT)的进步以及 COVID-19 后医疗保健提供方式的变化,使得癌症幸存者能够在线获取疾病相关信息,进行远程管理,而无需通过医疗保健提供者。理解和评估健康信息,数字素养是至关重要的。目的:本研究调查了癌症幸存者的信息搜索行为、信息来源、数字健康素养以及数字趋势,以及电子健康信息接受度和在线资源使用的潜在决定因素。方法:使用来自约旦癌症登记处的代表性随机癌症幸存者样本进行了一项全国性的 30 项横断面调查。卡方检验确定了分类变量之间的关系。使用均值和标准差,我们计算了李克特量表的有序数据平均值。p 值<0.05 为统计学显著。逻辑回归确定了对晚期轨迹信息获取和使用电子健康平台(应用程序、门户)进行癌症自我管理的兴趣的预测因素。结果:较低的数字素养和电子搜索与年龄较大、收入较低、教育程度较低以及就业状况较差有关(p≤0.001)。数字素养独立预测了远程管理的移动健康应用程序使用和对癌症支持性护理信息的兴趣。数字素养高的幸存者更喜欢使用数字平台(p≤0.001)。信息获取障碍包括“可靠性”(26%,n=25)和“健康信息可信度”(16.2%,n=25)。与早期癌症轨迹相比,治疗完成后,互联网搜索行为显著减少。结论:我们的研究结果表明,约旦癌症幸存者的数字素养较低可能会阻碍信息获取和以技术为支撑的癌症护理。应根据数字健康素养的不同水平,为癌症幸存者制定数字干预措施。医疗保健政策制定者应认识到数字不平等,并制定有针对性的举措,缩小数字鸿沟,同时满足数字化癌症护理提供的迫切需求。