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HICSS
2006
IEEE

Bridging the Digital Divide: Feasibility of Training Community Health Advisors to Use the Internet for Health Outreach

14 years 6 months ago
Bridging the Digital Divide: Feasibility of Training Community Health Advisors to Use the Internet for Health Outreach
We assessed the feasibility of “bridging the digital divide” by training community health advisors (CHAs) from low-income communities to use high-quality Internet-based health information in the context of health outreach activities to low-income, low-literacy AfricanAmerican populations in the deep south of the United States. CHAs were trained how to 1) use the Internet, 2) search for health information, and 3) evaluate online health information quality. An easy-to-use graphic interface website was developed for use in training and as a resource for future CHA outreach activities. After completing training, knowledge scores uniformly increased (p < 0.05). Attitudes toward computers also improved. CHAs found the CHA website easy to use and valuable for training. After 12-months of follow-up, we found that CHAs had infrequently used the Internet in their outreach activities. Despite their improved knowledge, in focus groups, CHAs reported that limited Internet access points, and...
Thomas K. Houston, Kimberly Robinson, Eta Berner,
Added 11 Jun 2010
Updated 11 Jun 2010
Type Conference
Year 2006
Where HICSS
Authors Thomas K. Houston, Kimberly Robinson, Eta Berner, Anantachai Panjamapirom, Mona Fouad, Edward Partridge
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