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Digital Health Literacy and Its Association With Sociodemographic Characteristics, Health Resource Use, and Health Outcomes: Rapid Review

Authors :
Eva Yuen
Natalie Winter
Feby Savira
Catherine E Huggins
Lemai Nguyen
Paul Cooper
Anna Peeters
Kate Anderson
Rahul Bhoyroo
Sarah Crowe
Anna Ugalde
Source :
Interactive Journal of Medical Research, Vol 13, p e46888 (2024)
Publication Year :
2024
Publisher :
JMIR Publications, 2024.

Abstract

BackgroundDigital health literacy has emerged as a critical skill set to navigate the digital age. ObjectiveThis review sought to broadly summarize the literature on associations between digital health literacy and (1) sociodemographic characteristics, (2) health resource use, and (3) health outcomes in the general population, patient groups, or parent or caregiver groups. MethodsA rapid review of literature published between January 2016 and May 2022 was conducted through a search of 4 web-based databases. Articles were included on the basis of the following keywords: “measured digital health literacy,” “digital literacy,” “ehealth literacy,” “e-health literacy,” “electronic health literacy,” or “internet health literacy” in adult populations; participants were from countries where English was the primary language; studies had to be cross-sectional, longitudinal, prospective, or retrospective, and published in English. ResultsThirty-six articles met the inclusion criteria. Evidence on the associations between digital health literacy and sociodemographic characteristics varied (27/36, 75% included studies), with higher education (16/21, 76.2% studies that examined the association) and younger age (12/21, 57.1% studies) tending to predict higher digital health literacy; however, other studies found no associations. No differences between genders were found across the majority of studies. Evidence across ethnic groups was too limited to draw conclusions; some studies showed that those from racial and ethnic minority groups had higher digital health literacy than White individuals, while other studies showed no associations. Higher digital health literacy was associated with digital health resource use in the majority of studies (20/36, 55.6%) that examined this relationship. In addition, higher digital health literacy was also associated with health outcomes across 3 areas (psychosocial outcomes; chronic disease and health management behaviors; and physical outcomes) across 17 included studies (17/36, 47.2%) that explored these relationships. However, not all studies on the relationship among digital health literacy and health resource use and health outcomes were in the expected direction. ConclusionsThe review presents mixed results regarding the relationship between digital health literacy and sociodemographic characteristics, although studies broadly found that increased digital health literacy was positively associated with improved health outcomes and behaviors. Further investigations of digital health literacy on chronic disease outcomes are needed, particularly across diverse groups. Empowering individuals with the skills to critically access and appraise reliable health information on digital platforms and devices is critical, given emerging evidence that suggests that those with low digital health literacy seek health information from unreliable sources. Identifying cost-effective strategies to rapidly assess and enhance digital health literacy capacities across community settings thus warrants continued investigation.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
1929073X
Volume :
13
Database :
Directory of Open Access Journals
Journal :
Interactive Journal of Medical Research
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
edsdoj.8a5c7ccf8bd4480b56c1b6c45151f4e
Document Type :
article
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.2196/46888