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首页> 外文期刊>Journal of health communication >The literacy divide: health literacy and the use of an internet-based patient portal in an integrated health system-results from the diabetes study of northern California (DISTANCE).
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The literacy divide: health literacy and the use of an internet-based patient portal in an integrated health system-results from the diabetes study of northern California (DISTANCE).

机译:识字率的差异:健康识字率和在集成的卫生系统中使用基于互联网的患者门户网站的结果-来自北加利福尼亚州的糖尿病研究(DISTANCE)。

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摘要

Internet-based patient portals are intended to improve access and quality, and will play an increasingly important role in health care, especially for diabetes and other chronic diseases. Diabetes patients with limited health literacy have worse health outcomes, and limited health literacy may be a barrier to effectively utilizing internet-based health access services. We investigated use of an internet-based patient portal among a well characterized population of adults with diabetes. We estimated health literacy using three validated self-report items. We explored the independent association between health literacy and use of the internet-based patient portal, adjusted for age, gender, race/ethnicity, educational attainment, and income. Among 14,102 participants (28% non-Hispanic White, 14% Latino, 21% African-American, 9% Asian, 12% Filipino, and 17% multiracial or other ethnicity), 6099 (62%) reported some limitation in health literacy, and 5671 (40%) respondents completed registration for the patient portal registration. In adjusted analyses, those with limited health literacy had higher odds of never signing on to the patient portal (OR 1.7, 1.4 to 1.9) compared with those who did not report any health literacy limitation. Even among those with internet access, the relationship between health literacy and patient portal use persisted (OR 1.4, 95% CI 1.2 to 1.8). Diabetes patients reporting limited health literacy were less likely to both access and navigate an internet-based patient portal than those with adequate health literacy. Although the internet has potential to greatly expand the capacity and reach of health care systems, current use patterns suggest that, in the absence of participatory design efforts involving those with limited health literacy, those most at risk for poor diabetes health outcomes will fall further behind if health systems increasingly rely on internet-based services.
机译:基于Internet的患者门户旨在改善访问和质量,并将在医疗保健(尤其是糖尿病和其他慢性疾病)中发挥越来越重要的作用。健康素养有限的糖尿病患者的健康状况较差,健康素养有限可能是有效利用基于互联网的健康访问服务的障碍。我们调查了特征明确的糖尿病成年人口中基于互联网的患者门户的使用。我们使用三个经过验证的自我报告项目估算了健康素养。我们探讨了健康素养与基于互联网的患者门户网站之间的独立联系,并根据年龄,性别,种族/民族,教育程度和收入进行了调整。在14,102名参与者中(28%的非西班牙裔白人,14%的拉丁裔,21%的非洲裔美国人,9%的亚裔,12%的菲律宾人和17%的多种族或其他族裔),其中6099名(62%)的参与者表示健康素养有所限制, 5671(40%)被调查者完成了患者门户注册的注册。在调整后的分析中,与那些未报告健康素养限制的人相比,健康素养有限的人从未登录患者门户的几率更高(OR 1.7,1.4至1.9)。即使在具有互联网访问权限的人群中,健康素养和患者门户网站使用之间的关系仍然存在(OR 1.4,95%CI 1.2至1.8)。与具有足够健康素养的人相比,报告健康素养有限的糖尿病患者访问和浏览基于互联网的患者门户的可能性较小。尽管互联网有潜力极大地扩大医疗保健系统的能力和覆盖范围,但目前的使用模式表明,如果缺乏参与式设计,而健康素养有限的人,那些糖尿病健康状况最差的人将进一步落后。卫生系统是否越来越依赖基于互联网的服务。

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