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Digital Health Literacy About COVID-19 as a Factor Mediating the Association Between the Importance of Online Information Search and Subjective Well-Being Among University Students in Vietnam
Description
<jats:p><jats:bold>Introduction:</jats:bold> Digital health literacy (DHL) has recently been proposed as a means of enabling healthy decisions for protective behavior, preventive measures, and adherence with COVID-19 policies and recommendations especially in the era of the “infodemic”. This study aimed to (1) identify COVID-19 related DHL and its association with online information seeking; (2) to elucidate COVID-19 related DHL as a mediator predictor between the importance of online information search and its association with subjective well-being among Vietnamese university students.</jats:p><jats:p><jats:bold>Methods:</jats:bold> A cross-sectional web-based survey was used to elicit the responses of Vietnamese students over 2 consecutive weeks (from April 25 to May 9, 2020, <jats:italic>n</jats:italic> = 1,003, 70.1% female students, mean age 21.4 ± 3.1). The online survey questionnaire collected data on the sociodemographic characteristics of participants, DHL about COVID-19, information seeking behavior, and subjective well-being. Mediation analysis was conducted using the importance of searching COVID-19 related information as independent variables, subjective well-being as a dependent variable, and DHL as a mediator variable.</jats:p><jats:p><jats:bold>Results:</jats:bold> Among 1,003 students, the mean (SD) of DHL related to COVID-19 was 2.87 ± 0.32. In the survey, 87.2% of the students reported sufficient well-being, while almost 13% reported low or very low well-being. The findings also indicated that search engines were the most popular platform for information seeking by Vietnamese students (95.3%) and 92.8% of participants had searched for information related to the current spread of COVID-19. Not searching for hygiene regulation as part of infection control and an average level of information satisfaction were associated with limited DHL (<jats:italic>p</jats:italic> < 0.05). The importance of online information searching related to COVID-19 increased the subjective well-being of students significantly and limited DHL (<jats:italic>p</jats:italic> < 0.05). DHL was found to mediate the relationship between the importance of online information searching and the subjective well-being of students.</jats:p><jats:p><jats:bold>Conclusion:</jats:bold> The finding provides insight into DHL about COVID-19 among university students, and their ability to find, understand, appraise, and use online health related information during lockdown throughout the first COVID-19 pandemic wave. DHL should be highlighted as a mediating factor that enhances the positive effect of the importance of information seeking on psychological well-being. However, further studies are needed to better define the mediating role of DHL across other factors.</jats:p>
Journal
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- Frontiers in Digital Health
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Frontiers in Digital Health 3 2021-09-27
Frontiers Media SA
- Tweet
Keywords
- Sociology and Political Science
- FOS: Political science
- Social Sciences
- Health Professions
- Infectious disease (medical specialty)
- Library science
- vietnamese students
- Pathology
- Psychology
- Disease
- Political science
- Pedagogy
- R
- digital health literacy
- The Spread of Misinformation Online
- FOS: Philosophy, ethics and religion
- FOS: Psychology
- Clinical Psychology
- covid-19
- Impact of Health Literacy on Health Outcomes
- General Health Professions
- Medicine
- Public aspects of medicine
- RA1-1270
- Information literacy
- Medical education
- Association (psychology)
- Vietnamese students
- Information Seeking Behavior
- 610
- Vietnamese
- FOS: Law
- Applied psychology
- Health Sciences
- /dk/atira/pure/core/keywords/559092180
- Information seeking behavior
- Mediation
- Health care
- 302
- Health sciences
- COVID-19
- Health literacy
- Internet Health Information
- Linguistics
- QA75.5-76.95
- Computer science
- Health Literacy
- Coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19)
- Philosophy
- subjective well-being
- Electronic computers. Computer science
- Impact of COVID-19 on Mental Health
- FOS: Languages and literature
- Psychotherapist
- Information seeking
- mediator
- Law
Details 詳細情報について
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- CRID
- 1870302168246749440
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- ISSN
- 2673253X
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- HANDLE
- 10179/19889
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- PubMed
- 34713205
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- Data Source
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- OpenAIRE