Yang Rumei, Gao Shiying, Jiang Yun
School of Nursing, Nanjing Medical University, Nanjing, China.
School of Nursing, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, USA.
BMC Geriatr. 2024 Dec 21;24(1):1027. doi: 10.1186/s12877-024-05612-y.
The rapid development of digital technologies has fundamentally changed the care for older adults. However, not all older adults have equal opportunities to access and use the technologies, more importantly, be able to benefit from the technologies. We aimed to explore (1) the prevalence and the trend in the prevalence of digital divide in older adults, including digital access gap, digital use gap (specifically, using digital technologies for health commutation [e-communication gap]), and self-efficacy in information seeking gap (cognitive gap); (2) sociodemographic factors related to three perspectives of digital divide; and (3) the association between digital divide and self-rated health (exploratory).
Adults aged 65 years or older (N = 5,671, weighted mean [SD] age = 74.26 [10.09] years) from the Health Information National Trends Surveys (2017-2020) were analyzed using the weighted logistic and linear regression models.
There was a significant linear decrease in the adjusted prevalence of digital access gap (odds ratio [OR] = 0.86, 95% CI = 0.78, 0.94) and the e-communication gap (OR = 0.88, 95% CI = 0.82, 0.95) over time. However, there were no significant changes in cognitive gap between 2017 and 2019, and between 2018 and 2020. Overall, older adults with digital divide were more likely to be less educated, have less income, and self-identified as Hispanic people. Univariate analyses found that three perspectives of digital divide were significantly associated with poor self-rated health. Multivariate analyses adjusted for covariates (e.g., age and sex) found that the access gap but not the e-commutation gap was associated with self-rated health and that cognitive gap was only associated with self-rated health between 2018 and 2020 but not between 2017 and 2019.
Digital divide is decreasing but remains persistent and disproportionately affects self-rated health of older adults, particularly those who are socially disadvantaged (e.g., lower education and income). Continued efforts are needed to address digital divide among them.
数字技术的快速发展从根本上改变了对老年人的护理。然而,并非所有老年人都有平等的机会获取和使用这些技术,更重要的是,能够从这些技术中受益。我们旨在探讨:(1)老年人数字鸿沟的患病率及其变化趋势,包括数字接入差距、数字使用差距(具体而言,使用数字技术进行健康交流[电子通信差距])以及信息寻求自我效能差距(认知差距);(2)与数字鸿沟三个方面相关的社会人口学因素;(3)数字鸿沟与自评健康之间的关联(探索性)。
对来自健康信息国家趋势调查(2017 - 2020年)的65岁及以上成年人(N = 5671,加权平均[标准差]年龄 = 74.26[10.09]岁)进行加权逻辑回归和线性回归模型分析。
随着时间的推移,数字接入差距(优势比[OR] = 0.86,95%置信区间[CI] = 0.78,0.94)和电子通信差距(OR = 0.88,95% CI = 0.82,0.95)的调整患病率呈显著线性下降。然而,2017年至2019年以及2018年至2020年期间,认知差距没有显著变化。总体而言,存在数字鸿沟的老年人更有可能受教育程度较低、收入较少且自我认定为西班牙裔。单因素分析发现,数字鸿沟的三个方面与自评健康状况不佳显著相关。在对协变量(如年龄和性别)进行调整的多因素分析中,发现接入差距而非电子通信差距与自评健康相关,并且认知差距仅在2018年至2020年期间与自评健康相关,而在2017年至2019年期间并非如此。
数字鸿沟正在缩小,但仍然存在,并且对老年人的自评健康产生了不成比例的影响,特别是那些社会经济地位不利的老年人(例如,教育程度和收入较低)。需要持续努力解决他们之间的数字鸿沟问题。