Rush Kathy L, Seaton Cherisse L, Louloudi Angeliki-Iliana, Li Eric P H, Hasan Khalad
School of Nursing, University of British Columbia, Okanagan Campus, Kelowna, British Columbia, Canada.
Faculty of Management, University of British Columbia, Okanagan Campus, Kelowna, British Columbia, Canada.
PLoS One. 2025 Sep 8;20(9):e0330347. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0330347. eCollection 2025.
This study examined the experience of digital connectivity among rural-living British Columbians both with and without access to high-speed Internet at home.
Evidence indicates that fewer rural communities have access to high-speed Internet compared to urban communities in Canada, despite government commitments to bring high-speed Internet to all British Columbians by 2027. Yet, differences within rural areas relative to those with access to high-speed compared to those with lower speeds remains a relatively unexplored area.
A cross-sectional survey of rural British Columbians both with and without high-speed Internet was conducted between October 2023 and April 2024. Closed and open-ended questions gathered participants' thoughts and experiences with digital technology access and use.
Overall, 461 (M age = 56 years, 72% female) rural BC community members (47% with access to 50 + Mbps download speeds) completed the survey. Despite similar overall digital readiness, skill, and confidence using digital technology, those without high-speed Internet were older, more remote-living, reported using fewer connected devices alongside greater frustration with technology, yet had comparable frequency of Internet use except for less streaming compared to those with access to high-speed Internet. Similar themes were found among open-ended responses of both those with and without high-speed Internet access and surrounded: i) the actual and potential benefits of high-speed connectivity, and ii.) disconnects on many levels, but particularly between expectations for and reality of high-speed connectivity.
Regardless of broadband speed, there were greater similarities than there were differences across rural community participants, with common perceptions of the benefits of connectivity amid experiences with pervasive disconnections on a number of levels.
本研究调查了居住在不列颠哥伦比亚省农村地区、家中有或没有高速互联网接入的居民的数字连接体验。
有证据表明,与加拿大城市社区相比,农村社区能够接入高速互联网的较少,尽管政府承诺到2027年让所有不列颠哥伦比亚省居民都能使用高速互联网。然而,农村地区内部,高速互联网接入者与低速接入者之间的差异仍是一个相对未被探索的领域。
在2023年10月至2024年4月期间,对家中有或没有高速互联网的不列颠哥伦比亚省农村居民进行了一项横断面调查。通过封闭式和开放式问题收集了参与者对数字技术获取和使用的想法及体验。
总体而言,461名(平均年龄56岁,72%为女性)不列颠哥伦比亚省农村社区成员(47%能接入50 + Mbps的下载速度)完成了调查。尽管在总体数字准备程度、使用数字技术的技能和信心方面相似,但没有高速互联网的人年龄更大,居住得更偏远,报告使用的联网设备较少,对技术也更沮丧,不过除了与高速互联网接入者相比流媒体使用频率较低外,他们的互联网使用频率相当。在有和没有高速互联网接入者的开放式回答中发现了类似主题,包括:i)高速连接的实际和潜在好处,以及ii)在许多层面上的脱节,特别是高速连接的期望与现实之间的脱节。
无论宽带速度如何,农村社区参与者之间的相似之处多于差异,在多个层面普遍存在脱节体验的情况下,他们对连接的好处有着共同的认知。