Health Literacy and Health Information Technology Adoption: The Potential for a New Digital Divide
University of Texas Health Science Center at Dallas · The University of Texas at Austin · +3 more institutions
Abstract
Approximately one-half of American adults exhibit low health literacy and thus struggle to find and use health information. Low health literacy is associated with negative outcomes including overall poorer health. Health information technology (HIT) makes health information available directly to patients through electronic tools including patient portals, wearable technology, and mobile apps. The direct availability of this information to patients, however, may be complicated by misunderstanding of HIT privacy and information sharing.
The purpose of this study was to determine whether health literacy is associated with patients' use of four types of HIT tools: fitness and nutrition apps, activity trackers, and patient portals. Additionally, we sought to explore whether health literacy is associated with patients' perceived ease of use and usefulness of these HIT tools, as well as patients' perceptions of privacy offered by HIT tools and trust in government, media, technology companies, and health care. This study is the first wide-scale investigation of these interrelated concepts.
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 68.36
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 31
Authors
5- MMMichael MackertCorresponding
University of Texas Health Science Center at Dallas, The University of Texas at Austin, The University of Texas Health Science Center at Houston
- AMAmanda Mabry‐Flynn
University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign
- SCSara Champlin
University of North Texas
- EEErin E. Donovan
The University of Texas at Austin
- KPKathrynn Pounders
The University of Texas at Austin
Topics & keywords
- Activity tracker
- Health literacy
- Health information technology
- Patient portal
- Health care
- Internet privacy
- Digital divide
- Literacy
- Quality Education