A study on health information literacy among urban and suburban residents in six provinces in China.
- Author:
Xueqiong NIE
1
;
Yinghua LI
2
;
Li LI
1
;
Xianggang HUANG
1
Author Information
- Publication Type:Journal Article
- MeSH: Adult; China; epidemiology; Data Collection; Demography; Health Education; Health Knowledge, Attitudes, Practice; Health Literacy; Humans; Internet; Logistic Models; Male; Middle Aged; Multivariate Analysis; Rural Population; Sex Factors; Surveys and Questionnaires; Young Adult
- From: Chinese Journal of Preventive Medicine 2014;48(7):566-570
- CountryChina
- Language:Chinese
-
Abstract:
OBJECTIVETo understand the status and its influencing factors of health information literacy among urban and suburban residents in China, and to explore the method for improving the health information literacy.
METHODSFrom March to May in 2013, residents aged 18-60 years in six provinces in China were investigated with Questionnaire of Health Literacy of Diabetes Mellitus of the Public in China about self-reported health information literacy. The results of the survey were standardized by the 6th national census data. Logistic regression analysis was used to explore influencing factors of health information literacy.
RESULTSA total of 4 416 residents were surveyed, and 4 282 (97.0%) valid questionnaires were collected. After weight adjustments, 30.1% of the residents aged 18-60 years had adequate health information literacy in China, and the 95%CI of the rate was 28.5% - 31.6%. Totally, 70.8% of the residents ever actively searched for health information, 43.7% of the residents could easily retrieve the health information, 49.1% of the residents could easily understand the health information, 41.8% of the residents could confidently differentiate the quality of the health information and 51.1% of the residents ever searched health information on the internet. The results of multi-logistic regression showed that the rural residents, the males, those with lower levels of education, those with poor health had a lower health information literacy. The most trusted health information source was from doctors, and the trust rate reached 97.0%, followed by family members, friends or colleagues. The residents trusted the interpersonal communication more than the mass media and the new media.
CONCLUSIONThe level of health information literacy of the residents was generally low in China. To improve the health information literacy, high-quality health information services should be delivered to the residents, and the health education on the internet provided by the medical professionals should also be explored.