Vazquez Christian E, Handique Swasati, Carson Hailey, Lin Chieh-Ru, Xie Bo
School of Social Work, University of Texas at Arlington, Arlington, Texas, USA.
Research Services, Libraries, University of Texas at Arlington, Arlington, Texas, USA.
Innov Aging. 2025 May 6;9(6):igaf042. doi: 10.1093/geroni/igaf042. eCollection 2025.
eHealth can help individuals improve or maintain autonomy in health management and decision-making, but using eHealth requires adequate eHealth literacy. Older adults tend to have low rates of eHealth literacy, which are worse among older Latinos in the U.S., especially those who are Spanish speaking. Evidence-based eHealth literacy interventions for older adult Spanish speakers are needed, but it is not clear which strategies are effective for this population. The objective of the present study was to understand (a) what researchers who conduct eHealth interventions with eHealth literacy outcomes do to ensure inclusion of older adult Spanish-speaking Latinos and (b) whether it is effective.
Six databases were searched for peer-reviewed studies on eHealth literacy interventions for U.S.-based older adult Latinos, from November 1, 2023, to January 31, 2024. Eligibility criteria for studies were: published in 2000 or later; intervention study with Spanish-speaking Latinos; participants aged ≥ 65 years; and eHealth literacy as an outcome. Excluded studies provided no details of adaptation/strategies to include Spanish speakers, used only phone calls or texts in the intervention, or were not peer-reviewed. Search terms included "Hispanic" OR "Latin*" AND "health literacy" OR "eHealth literacy" AND "Spanish" AND "mHealth*" OR "mobile health" OR "tech*" OR "eHealth" OR "digi*" AND "older adults" OR "seniors" OR "elderly" AND "intervention*."
A total of 2,362 articles were identified; 1,084 were duplicates. Titles and abstracts of 1,278 articles were screened. Seventy articles went through full-text screening, and none met the inclusion criteria.
This result was unexpected, given that several reviews have identified the need to increase eHealth literacy among older adults and Spanish speakers. This empty review demonstrates an important gap in knowledge. Intervention researchers can pull insights from adjacent literature until more evidence becomes available for this specific issue and population.
电子健康可帮助个人在健康管理和决策中提高或维持自主性,但使用电子健康需要具备足够的电子健康素养。老年人的电子健康素养水平往往较低,在美国的老年拉丁裔中情况更糟,尤其是那些说西班牙语的人。需要针对说西班牙语的老年人开展基于证据的电子健康素养干预措施,但尚不清楚哪些策略对该人群有效。本研究的目的是了解:(a)开展具有电子健康素养结果的电子健康干预研究的人员为确保纳入说西班牙语的老年拉丁裔采取了哪些措施;(b)这些措施是否有效。
于2023年11月1日至2024年1月31日在六个数据库中检索了关于美国老年拉丁裔电子健康素养干预的同行评审研究。研究的纳入标准为:2000年或之后发表;针对说西班牙语的拉丁裔的干预研究;参与者年龄≥65岁;以电子健康素养作为结果。排除的研究未提供纳入说西班牙语者的适应措施/策略细节、在干预中仅使用电话或短信,或未经过同行评审。检索词包括“西班牙裔”或“拉丁*”以及“健康素养”或“电子健康素养”以及“西班牙语”以及“移动健康*”或“移动医疗”或“技术*”或“电子健康”或“数字*”以及“老年人”或“年长者”或“老年人”以及“干预*”。
共识别出2362篇文章;其中1084篇为重复文章。对1278篇文章的标题和摘要进行了筛选。70篇文章进入全文筛选,但均不符合纳入标准。
鉴于多项综述已确定有必要提高老年人和说西班牙语者的电子健康素养,这一结果出人意料。此次一无所获的综述表明存在重要的知识空白。在针对这一特定问题和人群获得更多证据之前,干预研究人员可从相关文献中汲取见解。