Authors
Kobi V Ajayi, Sara Flores, Qiping Fan, Folakemi Ezenwanne, Whitney Garney, Elizabeth Wachira
Publication date
2023/6/1
Journal
Patient Education and Counseling
Volume
111
Pages
107703
Publisher
Elsevier
Description
Objective
To investigate the prevalence, correlates, and sources of women's health information-seeking behaviors in the United States using the Andersen Behavioral Model.
Methods
The 2012–2019 Health Information National Trends Survey data were used to analyze how and where women seek health theoretically. Weighted prevalence, descriptive analysis, and separate multivariable logistic regression models were computed to test the argument.
Results
The overall prevalence of seeking health information from any source was (83%, 95% CI: 0.82–0.84). Between 2012 and 2019, the analysis revealed a downward trend in health information seeking from any source (85.2–82.4%), health care provider (19.0–14.8%), family/friends (10.4–6.6%), and traditional channels (5.4–4.8%). Interestingly, there was an increase in Internet usage from 65.4% to 73.8%.
Conclusions
We found statistically significant relationships …
Total citations
2023202412
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