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Widening access to online health education for lung cancer: a feasibility study

Published: 11 April 2016 Publication History

Abstract

Having lung cancer is associated with accessibility issues because people afflicted with lung cancer tend to be older and less familiar with technology, and have low education levels and low health literacy. Fear, embarrassment and stigmatization also play a role. This makes it difficult for people to access the information they need to understand and manage their illness, particularly in the time before the diagnosis. We can mitigate these disadvantages and bridge the accessibility gap by ensuring people at risk for lung cancer are informed about symptoms and when to seek medical advice. The Web is uniquely placed to fulfill this role. We therefore developed an online lung cancer symptom appraisal tool tailored towards people with low education levels and health literacy and based on psychological theory to target barriers like fear and embarrassment. At present we are conducting a feasibility study to assess whether it is possible to reach the high risk population and encourage early help-seeking. So far, 97 users have participated, 97.9% of which report symptoms and risk factors that indicate they should seek medical help. 34% report education levels below school leaving qualification. Our tool led to a significantly higher intention to seek medical help than the same information without theory-based components (p = 0.01). Our initial analyses suggest this is a suitable approach to widening health education to excluded groups.

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Cited By

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  • (2019)An mHealth Assistive System “MyLung” to Empower Patients with Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease: Design Science ResearchJMIR Formative Research10.2196/124893:1(e12489)Online publication date: 19-Mar-2019
  • (2019)Designing a Web-based Decision Aid for Individuals to Consider Lung Cancer ScreeningProceedings of the 13th EAI International Conference on Pervasive Computing Technologies for Healthcare10.1145/3329189.3329210(51-60)Online publication date: 20-May-2019
  • (2019)MyLung: Design and Testing of a Mobile-Based Assistive Technology for COPD PatientsAdvances in Cryptology – EUROCRYPT 201910.1007/978-3-030-19504-5_12(172-188)Online publication date: 27-Apr-2019
  • Show More Cited By

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cover image ACM Other conferences
W4A '16: Proceedings of the 13th International Web for All Conference
April 2016
223 pages
ISBN:9781450341387
DOI:10.1145/2899475
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution International 4.0 License.

Sponsors

  • Intuit: Intuit Inc.
  • Google Inc.
  • Canvas Network: Canvas Network
  • TPG: The Paciello Group
  • IBM: IBM

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Association for Computing Machinery

New York, NY, United States

Publication History

Published: 11 April 2016

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Author Tags

  1. feasibility
  2. health education
  3. lung cancer
  4. online health information
  5. patient empowerment
  6. symptom appraisal

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  • Short-paper

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W4A'16
Sponsor:
  • Intuit
  • Canvas Network
  • TPG
  • IBM
W4A'16: International Web for All Conference
April 11 - 13, 2016
Montreal, Canada

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Overall Acceptance Rate 171 of 371 submissions, 46%

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Cited By

View all
  • (2019)An mHealth Assistive System “MyLung” to Empower Patients with Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease: Design Science ResearchJMIR Formative Research10.2196/124893:1(e12489)Online publication date: 19-Mar-2019
  • (2019)Designing a Web-based Decision Aid for Individuals to Consider Lung Cancer ScreeningProceedings of the 13th EAI International Conference on Pervasive Computing Technologies for Healthcare10.1145/3329189.3329210(51-60)Online publication date: 20-May-2019
  • (2019)MyLung: Design and Testing of a Mobile-Based Assistive Technology for COPD PatientsAdvances in Cryptology – EUROCRYPT 201910.1007/978-3-030-19504-5_12(172-188)Online publication date: 27-Apr-2019
  • (2017)Web Use for Symptom Appraisal of Physical Health Conditions: A Systematic ReviewJournal of Medical Internet Research10.2196/jmir.675519:6(e202)Online publication date: 13-Jun-2017

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