Health literacy, digital health literacy, and COVID-19 pandemic attitudes and behaviors in U.S. college students: Implications for interventions

Research output: Journal contributionsJournal articlesResearchpeer-review

Standard

Health literacy, digital health literacy, and COVID-19 pandemic attitudes and behaviors in U.S. college students: Implications for interventions. / Patil, Uday; Kostareva, Uliana; Hadley, Molly et al.
In: International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health, Vol. 18, No. 6, 3301, 23.03.2021.

Research output: Journal contributionsJournal articlesResearchpeer-review

Harvard

APA

Vancouver

Bibtex

@article{6965560d933e47e4af00904b65febaf0,
title = "Health literacy, digital health literacy, and COVID-19 pandemic attitudes and behaviors in U.S. college students: Implications for interventions",
abstract = "The COVID-19 pandemic has been accompanied by rapidly emerging evidence, changing guidance, and misinformation, which present new challenges for health literacy (HL) and digital health literacy (DHL) skills. This study explored whether COVID-19-related information access, attitudes, and behaviors were associated with health literacy and digital health literacy among college students in the United States. Self-reported measures of health literacy, along with items on pandemic-related attitudes, behaviors, information sources, and social networks, were collected online using a managed research panel. In July 2020, 256 responses were collected, which mirrored the racial/ethnic and gender diversity of U.S. colleges. Only 49% reported adequate HL, and 57% found DHL tasks easy overall. DHL did not vary by HL level. In multivariable models, both HL and DHL were independently associated with overall compliance with basic preventive practices. Higher DHL, but not HL, was significantly associated with greater willingness to get a COVID-19 vaccine and the belief that acquiring the disease would negatively impact their life. On average, respondents discussed health with 4–5 people, which did not vary by HL or DHL measures. The usage of online information sources varied by HL and DHL. The study findings can inform future student-focused interventions, including identifying the distinct roles of HL and DHL in pandemic information access, attitudes, and behaviors.",
keywords = "College student, Coronavirus, COVID-19, Digital health literacy, EHealth literacy, Health literacy, Online survey, Social network, Health sciences",
author = "Uday Patil and Uliana Kostareva and Molly Hadley and Manganello, {Jennifer A.} and Orkan Okan and Kevin Dadaczynski and Massey, {Philip M.} and Joy Agner and Tetine Sentell",
year = "2021",
month = mar,
day = "23",
doi = "10.3390/ijerph18063301",
language = "English",
volume = "18",
journal = "International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health",
issn = "1661-7827",
publisher = "MDPI AG",
number = "6",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Health literacy, digital health literacy, and COVID-19 pandemic attitudes and behaviors in U.S. college students

T2 - Implications for interventions

AU - Patil, Uday

AU - Kostareva, Uliana

AU - Hadley, Molly

AU - Manganello, Jennifer A.

AU - Okan, Orkan

AU - Dadaczynski, Kevin

AU - Massey, Philip M.

AU - Agner, Joy

AU - Sentell, Tetine

PY - 2021/3/23

Y1 - 2021/3/23

N2 - The COVID-19 pandemic has been accompanied by rapidly emerging evidence, changing guidance, and misinformation, which present new challenges for health literacy (HL) and digital health literacy (DHL) skills. This study explored whether COVID-19-related information access, attitudes, and behaviors were associated with health literacy and digital health literacy among college students in the United States. Self-reported measures of health literacy, along with items on pandemic-related attitudes, behaviors, information sources, and social networks, were collected online using a managed research panel. In July 2020, 256 responses were collected, which mirrored the racial/ethnic and gender diversity of U.S. colleges. Only 49% reported adequate HL, and 57% found DHL tasks easy overall. DHL did not vary by HL level. In multivariable models, both HL and DHL were independently associated with overall compliance with basic preventive practices. Higher DHL, but not HL, was significantly associated with greater willingness to get a COVID-19 vaccine and the belief that acquiring the disease would negatively impact their life. On average, respondents discussed health with 4–5 people, which did not vary by HL or DHL measures. The usage of online information sources varied by HL and DHL. The study findings can inform future student-focused interventions, including identifying the distinct roles of HL and DHL in pandemic information access, attitudes, and behaviors.

AB - The COVID-19 pandemic has been accompanied by rapidly emerging evidence, changing guidance, and misinformation, which present new challenges for health literacy (HL) and digital health literacy (DHL) skills. This study explored whether COVID-19-related information access, attitudes, and behaviors were associated with health literacy and digital health literacy among college students in the United States. Self-reported measures of health literacy, along with items on pandemic-related attitudes, behaviors, information sources, and social networks, were collected online using a managed research panel. In July 2020, 256 responses were collected, which mirrored the racial/ethnic and gender diversity of U.S. colleges. Only 49% reported adequate HL, and 57% found DHL tasks easy overall. DHL did not vary by HL level. In multivariable models, both HL and DHL were independently associated with overall compliance with basic preventive practices. Higher DHL, but not HL, was significantly associated with greater willingness to get a COVID-19 vaccine and the belief that acquiring the disease would negatively impact their life. On average, respondents discussed health with 4–5 people, which did not vary by HL or DHL measures. The usage of online information sources varied by HL and DHL. The study findings can inform future student-focused interventions, including identifying the distinct roles of HL and DHL in pandemic information access, attitudes, and behaviors.

KW - College student

KW - Coronavirus

KW - COVID-19

KW - Digital health literacy

KW - EHealth literacy

KW - Health literacy

KW - Online survey

KW - Social network

KW - Health sciences

UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85103005257&partnerID=8YFLogxK

U2 - 10.3390/ijerph18063301

DO - 10.3390/ijerph18063301

M3 - Journal articles

C2 - 33806763

AN - SCOPUS:85103005257

VL - 18

JO - International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health

JF - International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health

SN - 1661-7827

IS - 6

M1 - 3301

ER -

Documents

DOI

Recently viewed

Publications

  1. Applying the Rasch sampler to identify aberrant responding through person fit statistics under fixed nominal α-level.
  2. German version of the pediatric incontinence questionnaire for urinary incontinence health related quality of life
  3. Die "Matheasse" in Jena - ein Projekt zur Förderung mathematisch interessierter und (potenziell) begabter Grundschüler
  4. Wie wirken sich Joint Audits auf die Prüfungsqualität, Prüfungskosten und Anbieterkonzentration am Prüfungsmarkt aus?
  5. Generalized self-efficacy as a mediator and moderator between control and complexity at work and personal initiative
  6. Who stays proactive after entrepreneurship training? Need for cognition, personal initiative maintenance, and well-being
  7. Taking the heterogeneity of citizens into account: flood risk communication in coastal cities - a case study of Bremen
  8. The influence of vertical integration and property rights on network access charges in the German electricity market
  9. Nonadherence in outpatient thrombosis prophylaxis with low molecular weight heparins after major orthopaedic surgery
  10. How attribution-of-competence and scale-granularity explain the anchor precision effect in negotiations and estimations.
  11. Modelling the Complexity of Measurement Estimation Situations - A Theoretical Framework for the Estimation of Lengths
  12. Finding Creativity in Predictability: Seizing Kairos in Chronos Through Temporal Work in Complex Innovation Processes
  13. Considerations on efficient touch interfaces - How display size influences the performance in an applied pointing task
  14. Web-based support for daily functioning of people with mild intellectual disabilities or chronic psychiatric disorders
  15. Linking large-scale and small-scale distribution patterns of steppe plant species—An example using fourth-corner analysis
  16. Positionings: Toward a Relational Understanding of Representation and Writing in Organizational Communication Research
  17. Recognising the role of local and Indigenous communities in managing natural resources for the greater public benefit