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Comparing Transactional eHealth Literacy of Individuals With Cancer and Surrogate Information Seekers: Mixed Methods Study

Comparing Transactional eHealth Literacy of Individuals With Cancer and Surrogate Information Seekers: Mixed Methods Study

Paige et al [17] defined transactional e Health literacy as, “the ability to locate, understand, exchange, and evaluate health information from the internet in the presence of dynamic contextual factors, and to apply the knowledge gained for the purposes of maintaining or improving health.” e Health literacy is an expanding field of research, as a large portion of health-related messages and information is circulated and accessed through web-based, media, and digital sources [18] e Health literacy requires combining

Taylor S Vasquez, Carma L Bylund, Jordan Alpert, Julia Close, Tien Le, Merry Jennifer Markham, Greenberry B Taylor, Samantha R Paige

JMIR Form Res 2022;6(9):e36714

Association Between Health Literacy, Electronic Health Literacy, Disease-Specific Knowledge, and Health-Related Quality of Life Among Adults With Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease: Cross-Sectional Study

Association Between Health Literacy, Electronic Health Literacy, Disease-Specific Knowledge, and Health-Related Quality of Life Among Adults With Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease: Cross-Sectional Study

Correlations between main study variables were analyzed using Pearson r correlation coefficients. Hierarchical linear regressions were computed to examine the roles of health literacy and e Health literacy on generic (model 1) and lung-specific (model 2) HRQo L by sequentially adding predictors into 2 blocks within each model.

Michael Leland Stellefson, Samantha R Paige, Julia M Alber, Beth H Chaney, Don Chaney, Avery Apperson, Arjun Mohan

J Med Internet Res 2019;21(6):e12165

Electronic Health Literacy Across the Lifespan: Measurement Invariance Study

Electronic Health Literacy Across the Lifespan: Measurement Invariance Study

Paige and colleagues [17] found that adults in the middle-to-older adult age groups, or Boomers and members of the Silent Generation, were more likely to have low e Health literacy than their younger counterparts. Older age groups were also less likely to trust health information from social support forums but more likely to trust health information from Facebook.

Samantha R Paige, M David Miller, Janice L Krieger, Michael Stellefson, JeeWon Cheong

J Med Internet Res 2018;20(7):e10434

Reliability and Validity of the Telephone-Based eHealth Literacy Scale Among Older Adults: Cross-Sectional Survey

Reliability and Validity of the Telephone-Based eHealth Literacy Scale Among Older Adults: Cross-Sectional Survey

In this older population, perceived e Health literacy was judged to be moderate (mean 3.17, SD 0.93), with a moderate correlation established between perceived and actual e Health literacy (r=.34, P=.01). However, no psychometric data on e HEALS responses was reported in this age-restricted (50 years of age and older) sample. Therefore, much variability has been documented in the literature and has led to difficulty defining what the unique factors, or e HEALS subscales, may be measuring.

Michael Leland Stellefson, Samantha R Paige, Bethany Tennant, Julia M Alber, Beth H Chaney, Don Chaney, Suzanne Grossman

J Med Internet Res 2017;19(10):e362