“It’s Got to Be on This Page”: Age and Cognitive Style in a Study of Online Health Information Seeking

BackgroundThe extensive availability of online health information offers the public opportunities to become independently informed about their care, but what affects the successful retrieval and understanding of accurate and detailed information? We have limited knowledge abo...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Agree, Emily M, King, Abby C, Castro, Cynthia M, Wiley, Adrienne, Borzekowski, Dina LG
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: JMIR Publications 2015-03-01
Series:Journal of Medical Internet Research
Online Access:http://www.jmir.org/2015/3/e79/
id doaj-df3337aaa99a493a904939dc4f2e1a03
record_format Article
spelling doaj-df3337aaa99a493a904939dc4f2e1a032021-04-02T19:20:28ZengJMIR PublicationsJournal of Medical Internet Research1438-88712015-03-01173e7910.2196/jmir.3352“It’s Got to Be on This Page”: Age and Cognitive Style in a Study of Online Health Information SeekingAgree, Emily MKing, Abby CCastro, Cynthia MWiley, AdrienneBorzekowski, Dina LG BackgroundThe extensive availability of online health information offers the public opportunities to become independently informed about their care, but what affects the successful retrieval and understanding of accurate and detailed information? We have limited knowledge about the ways individuals use the Internet and the personal characteristics that affect online health literacy. ObjectiveThis study examined the extent to which age and cognitive style predicted success in searching for online health information, controlling for differences in education, daily Internet use, and general health literacy. MethodsThe Online Health Study (OHS) was conducted at Johns Hopkins School of Public Health and Stanford University School of Medicine from April 2009 to June 2010. The OHS was designed to explore the factors associated with success in obtaining health information across different age groups. A total of 346 men and women aged 35 years and older of diverse racial and ethnic backgrounds participated in the study. Participants were evaluated for success in searching online for answers to health-related tasks/questions on nutrition, cancer, alternative medicine, vaccinations, medical equipment, and genetic testing. ResultsCognitive style, in terms of context sensitivity, was associated with less success in obtaining online health information, with tasks involving visual judgment most affected. In addition, better health literacy was positively associated with overall success in online health seeking, specifically for tasks requiring prior health knowledge. The oldest searchers were disadvantaged even after controlling for education, Internet use, general health literacy, and cognitive style, especially when spatial tasks such as mapping were involved. ConclusionsThe increasing availability of online health information provides opportunities to improve patient education and knowledge, but effective use of these resources depends on online health literacy. Greater support for those who are in the oldest cohorts and for design of interfaces that support users with different cognitive styles may be required in an age of shared medical decision making.http://www.jmir.org/2015/3/e79/
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Agree, Emily M
King, Abby C
Castro, Cynthia M
Wiley, Adrienne
Borzekowski, Dina LG
spellingShingle Agree, Emily M
King, Abby C
Castro, Cynthia M
Wiley, Adrienne
Borzekowski, Dina LG
“It’s Got to Be on This Page”: Age and Cognitive Style in a Study of Online Health Information Seeking
Journal of Medical Internet Research
author_facet Agree, Emily M
King, Abby C
Castro, Cynthia M
Wiley, Adrienne
Borzekowski, Dina LG
author_sort Agree, Emily M
title “It’s Got to Be on This Page”: Age and Cognitive Style in a Study of Online Health Information Seeking
title_short “It’s Got to Be on This Page”: Age and Cognitive Style in a Study of Online Health Information Seeking
title_full “It’s Got to Be on This Page”: Age and Cognitive Style in a Study of Online Health Information Seeking
title_fullStr “It’s Got to Be on This Page”: Age and Cognitive Style in a Study of Online Health Information Seeking
title_full_unstemmed “It’s Got to Be on This Page”: Age and Cognitive Style in a Study of Online Health Information Seeking
title_sort “it’s got to be on this page”: age and cognitive style in a study of online health information seeking
publisher JMIR Publications
series Journal of Medical Internet Research
issn 1438-8871
publishDate 2015-03-01
description BackgroundThe extensive availability of online health information offers the public opportunities to become independently informed about their care, but what affects the successful retrieval and understanding of accurate and detailed information? We have limited knowledge about the ways individuals use the Internet and the personal characteristics that affect online health literacy. ObjectiveThis study examined the extent to which age and cognitive style predicted success in searching for online health information, controlling for differences in education, daily Internet use, and general health literacy. MethodsThe Online Health Study (OHS) was conducted at Johns Hopkins School of Public Health and Stanford University School of Medicine from April 2009 to June 2010. The OHS was designed to explore the factors associated with success in obtaining health information across different age groups. A total of 346 men and women aged 35 years and older of diverse racial and ethnic backgrounds participated in the study. Participants were evaluated for success in searching online for answers to health-related tasks/questions on nutrition, cancer, alternative medicine, vaccinations, medical equipment, and genetic testing. ResultsCognitive style, in terms of context sensitivity, was associated with less success in obtaining online health information, with tasks involving visual judgment most affected. In addition, better health literacy was positively associated with overall success in online health seeking, specifically for tasks requiring prior health knowledge. The oldest searchers were disadvantaged even after controlling for education, Internet use, general health literacy, and cognitive style, especially when spatial tasks such as mapping were involved. ConclusionsThe increasing availability of online health information provides opportunities to improve patient education and knowledge, but effective use of these resources depends on online health literacy. Greater support for those who are in the oldest cohorts and for design of interfaces that support users with different cognitive styles may be required in an age of shared medical decision making.
url http://www.jmir.org/2015/3/e79/
work_keys_str_mv AT agreeemilym itsgottobeonthispageageandcognitivestyleinastudyofonlinehealthinformationseeking
AT kingabbyc itsgottobeonthispageageandcognitivestyleinastudyofonlinehealthinformationseeking
AT castrocynthiam itsgottobeonthispageageandcognitivestyleinastudyofonlinehealthinformationseeking
AT wileyadrienne itsgottobeonthispageageandcognitivestyleinastudyofonlinehealthinformationseeking
AT borzekowskidinalg itsgottobeonthispageageandcognitivestyleinastudyofonlinehealthinformationseeking
_version_ 1721549213977804800