Association of Online Health Information–Seeking Behavior and Self-Care Activities Among Type 2 Diabetic Patients in Saudi Arabia

BackgroundHealth information obtained from the Internet has an impact on patient health care outcomes. There is a growing concern over the quality of online health information sources used by diabetic patients because little is known about their health information–seeking beh...

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Main Authors: Jamal, Amr, Khan, Samina A, AlHumud, Ahmed, Al-Duhyyim, Abdulaziz, Alrashed, Mohammed, Bin Shabr, Faisal, Alteraif, Alwalid, Almuziri, Abdullah, Househ, Mowafa, Qureshi, Riaz
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: JMIR Publications 2015-08-01
Series:Journal of Medical Internet Research
Online Access:http://www.jmir.org/2015/8/e196/
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spelling doaj-c8a43203550d4eedb6800197f547084e2021-04-02T19:00:40ZengJMIR PublicationsJournal of Medical Internet Research1438-88712015-08-01178e19610.2196/jmir.4312Association of Online Health Information–Seeking Behavior and Self-Care Activities Among Type 2 Diabetic Patients in Saudi ArabiaJamal, AmrKhan, Samina AAlHumud, AhmedAl-Duhyyim, AbdulazizAlrashed, MohammedBin Shabr, FaisalAlteraif, AlwalidAlmuziri, AbdullahHouseh, MowafaQureshi, Riaz BackgroundHealth information obtained from the Internet has an impact on patient health care outcomes. There is a growing concern over the quality of online health information sources used by diabetic patients because little is known about their health information–seeking behavior and the impact this behavior has on their diabetes-related self-care, in particular in the Middle East setting. ObjectiveThe aim of this study was to determine the online health-related information–seeking behavior among adult type 2 diabetic patients in the Middle East and the impact of their online health-related information–seeking behavior on their self-care activities. MethodsA cross-sectional survey was conducted on 344 patients with type 2 diabetes attending inpatient and outpatient primary health care clinics at 2 teaching hospitals in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia. The main outcome measures included the ability of patients to access the Internet, their ability to use the Internet to search for health-related information, and their responses to Internet searches in relation to their self-care activities. Further analysis of differences based on age, gender, sociodemographic, and diabetes-related self-care activities among online health-related information seekers and nononline health-related information seekers was conducted. ResultsAmong the 344 patients, 74.1% (255/344) were male with a mean age of 53.5 (SD 13.8) years. Only 39.0% (134/344) were Internet users; 71.6% (96/134) of them used the Internet for seeking health-related information. Most participants reported that their primary source of health-related information was their physician (216/344, 62.8%) followed by television (155/344, 45.1%), family (113/344, 32.8%), newspapers (100/344, 29.1%), and the Internet (96/344, 27.9%). Primary topics participants searched for were therapeutic diet for diabetes (55/96, 57%) and symptoms of diabetes (52/96, 54%) followed by diabetes treatment (50/96, 52%). Long history of diabetes, familial history of the disease, unemployment, and not seeking diabetes education were the most common barriers for online health-related information–seeking behavior. Younger age, female, marital status, higher education, higher income, and longer duration of Internet usage were associated with more online health-related information–seeking behaviors. Most (89/96, 93%) online health-related information seekers reported positive change in their behaviors after seeking online health information. Overall odds ratio (OR 1.56, 95% CI 0.63-3.28) for all self-care responses demonstrated that there was no statistically significant difference between those seeking health-related information online and non–health-related information seekers. However, health-related information seekers were better in testing their blood glucose regularly, taking proper action for hyperglycemia, and adopting nonpharmacological management. ConclusionsPhysicians and television are still the primary sources of health-related information for adult diabetic patients in Saudi Arabia whether they seek health-related information online or not. This study demonstrates that participants seeking online health-related information are more conscious about their diabetes self-care compared to non–health-related information seekers in some aspects more than the others.http://www.jmir.org/2015/8/e196/
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Jamal, Amr
Khan, Samina A
AlHumud, Ahmed
Al-Duhyyim, Abdulaziz
Alrashed, Mohammed
Bin Shabr, Faisal
Alteraif, Alwalid
Almuziri, Abdullah
Househ, Mowafa
Qureshi, Riaz
spellingShingle Jamal, Amr
Khan, Samina A
AlHumud, Ahmed
Al-Duhyyim, Abdulaziz
Alrashed, Mohammed
Bin Shabr, Faisal
Alteraif, Alwalid
Almuziri, Abdullah
Househ, Mowafa
Qureshi, Riaz
Association of Online Health Information–Seeking Behavior and Self-Care Activities Among Type 2 Diabetic Patients in Saudi Arabia
Journal of Medical Internet Research
author_facet Jamal, Amr
Khan, Samina A
AlHumud, Ahmed
Al-Duhyyim, Abdulaziz
Alrashed, Mohammed
Bin Shabr, Faisal
Alteraif, Alwalid
Almuziri, Abdullah
Househ, Mowafa
Qureshi, Riaz
author_sort Jamal, Amr
title Association of Online Health Information–Seeking Behavior and Self-Care Activities Among Type 2 Diabetic Patients in Saudi Arabia
title_short Association of Online Health Information–Seeking Behavior and Self-Care Activities Among Type 2 Diabetic Patients in Saudi Arabia
title_full Association of Online Health Information–Seeking Behavior and Self-Care Activities Among Type 2 Diabetic Patients in Saudi Arabia
title_fullStr Association of Online Health Information–Seeking Behavior and Self-Care Activities Among Type 2 Diabetic Patients in Saudi Arabia
title_full_unstemmed Association of Online Health Information–Seeking Behavior and Self-Care Activities Among Type 2 Diabetic Patients in Saudi Arabia
title_sort association of online health information–seeking behavior and self-care activities among type 2 diabetic patients in saudi arabia
publisher JMIR Publications
series Journal of Medical Internet Research
issn 1438-8871
publishDate 2015-08-01
description BackgroundHealth information obtained from the Internet has an impact on patient health care outcomes. There is a growing concern over the quality of online health information sources used by diabetic patients because little is known about their health information–seeking behavior and the impact this behavior has on their diabetes-related self-care, in particular in the Middle East setting. ObjectiveThe aim of this study was to determine the online health-related information–seeking behavior among adult type 2 diabetic patients in the Middle East and the impact of their online health-related information–seeking behavior on their self-care activities. MethodsA cross-sectional survey was conducted on 344 patients with type 2 diabetes attending inpatient and outpatient primary health care clinics at 2 teaching hospitals in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia. The main outcome measures included the ability of patients to access the Internet, their ability to use the Internet to search for health-related information, and their responses to Internet searches in relation to their self-care activities. Further analysis of differences based on age, gender, sociodemographic, and diabetes-related self-care activities among online health-related information seekers and nononline health-related information seekers was conducted. ResultsAmong the 344 patients, 74.1% (255/344) were male with a mean age of 53.5 (SD 13.8) years. Only 39.0% (134/344) were Internet users; 71.6% (96/134) of them used the Internet for seeking health-related information. Most participants reported that their primary source of health-related information was their physician (216/344, 62.8%) followed by television (155/344, 45.1%), family (113/344, 32.8%), newspapers (100/344, 29.1%), and the Internet (96/344, 27.9%). Primary topics participants searched for were therapeutic diet for diabetes (55/96, 57%) and symptoms of diabetes (52/96, 54%) followed by diabetes treatment (50/96, 52%). Long history of diabetes, familial history of the disease, unemployment, and not seeking diabetes education were the most common barriers for online health-related information–seeking behavior. Younger age, female, marital status, higher education, higher income, and longer duration of Internet usage were associated with more online health-related information–seeking behaviors. Most (89/96, 93%) online health-related information seekers reported positive change in their behaviors after seeking online health information. Overall odds ratio (OR 1.56, 95% CI 0.63-3.28) for all self-care responses demonstrated that there was no statistically significant difference between those seeking health-related information online and non–health-related information seekers. However, health-related information seekers were better in testing their blood glucose regularly, taking proper action for hyperglycemia, and adopting nonpharmacological management. ConclusionsPhysicians and television are still the primary sources of health-related information for adult diabetic patients in Saudi Arabia whether they seek health-related information online or not. This study demonstrates that participants seeking online health-related information are more conscious about their diabetes self-care compared to non–health-related information seekers in some aspects more than the others.
url http://www.jmir.org/2015/8/e196/
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