Christina Zarcadoolas - Leapfrogging: What Social Media Is Doing for Communicative Competence.pptx

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"Leapfrogging: What Social Media Is Doing for Communicative Competence" was presented at the Center for Health Literacy Conference 2011: Plain Talk in Complex Times by Christina Zarcadoolas, PhD, Professor, CUNY School of Public Health at Hunter College.Description: This presenter will discuss how social media and mobile technologies are helping minorities leapfrog the digital divide and what implications this has for communicating health information and advancing public health literacy.

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Leapfrogging: What Social Media Is Doing for Communicative Competence

Plain Talk in Complex TimesChristina Zarcadoolas, PhD

CUNY SPH at Hunter CollegeSept. 23 2011

Falling Through the Net…the Coming Digital Divide - 1990’s

• On July 28, 1998, NTIA – report on telephone and computer penetration rates.

• Finds, there is still a significant "digital divide" based on race, income, and other demographic characteristics in computers in homes.

• http://www.ntia.doc.gov/ntiahome/net2 National Telecommunications and Information Administration

Who had computers at home?

Who was online?

Divide – dis-equity

What a difference a new century makes.

Narrowing Digital Divide

National Center for Educational Statistics http://nces.ed.gov/

Household Broadband Use by Race/Ethnicity

Asian, NH White, NH Black, NH AI or AN, NH Hispanic0

10

20

30

40

50

60

70

80

9077.3%

68%

49.4% 48.3% 47.9%

Dept of Commerce 2010 Report(Slide courtesy of Vish Viswanath)

Technology is ever more powerful

• It’s growing EXPONENTIALLY – iPhone 1,2,3….• Technology is crowd- sourced• It gets cheaper - Hard drive was $3400 - now

$100 ( 10 megabyte)• It gets more personally “relevant” – we can

“quantify ourselves” : Fit Bit ; deCode Me • It’s in the common discourse and media –

People Talk About it - IBMs WATSON beats humans on Jeopardy

Technology growth

• Exponential - iPhone 1, 2, 3,4• 20,000 different apps for the iPhone today• You can pee on an S chip or check blood

glucose via mobile device• Yes – there’s an app for that. (See - TED talk - David Kraft, June 2011)

Web 2.0 Crowd Sourcing

Texting• 75% of teens have cell phones(up

45%/2004)• They send 50 - 100 text messages

a day • Nearly three quarters (73%) of

online teens and an equal number (72%) of young adults use social network sites.

Youth Media Diet – 12 hours

Source: 2009 Alloy College Explorer

Broad Band Use (2010)

• 69% of African Americans and 58 % of Hispanics now regularly use the Internet, compared with 79% of whites.

• Rate of broadband adoption in African American homes has risen to 59% from the 46 percent.

(Joint Commission for Political and Economic Studies, 2/25/10 National Minority Broadband Adoption: Comparative Trends in Adoption, Acceptance and Use, Joint Center's website at (www.jointcenter.org)

African-Americans and Hispanics leading the charge in growth of mobile.

• 46 % of non-Hispanic blacks and 51% of English-speaking Hispanics use their phones for internet access, compared with 33% of non-Hispanic white Americans. (poll not in Spanish language)

• “This is my laptop”

http://www.pewinternet.org/Reports/2010/Mobile-Access-2010.aspx

http://techcrunch.com/2008/07/11/nielsen-iphone-in-fourth-place-among-smartphones-first-in-customer-satisfaction-not-for-long/

Minorities have equal or greater usage on most major social media platforms

Social networking sites

Online video Twitter0

102030405060708090

Social media usage by race/ethnicity(% of Internet users)

WhiteBlackLatino

PEW Internet and American Life Project 2010 data

The communication technology revolution: rethinking health literacy

Web 2.0Informatics

eHealth

eHealth

• An emerging concept known as "eHealth" seeks to capitalize on the promise of new media technologies to facilitate equal access to timely and credible health information.

Web 2.0 communication: key measures

• Internet penetration (~69-75% adults1, 2) • Broadband adoption (~66%2) • Mobile technologies (~82% 2) • Social networking participation (23% of Internet

users1)• Health information seeking online (80% of Internet

users2)• Health-related Internet use3

1 Chou, WS et al. 2009. Social Media Use in the US: Implications for health communication, JMIR, 1(4): e48.2 Pew Internet and American Life Project3 Chou, WS et al. 2011. Health-related Internet Use among Cancer Survivors: Data from Health Information National Trends Survey, 2003-2008. J Cancer Survivorship.

Lower Use with Less Education

2338

14611461

391

0%

10%

20%

30%

40%

50%

60%

70%

80% Requested password

Logged on

College Grad/Post Grad

Some College High School/

GED

No High School Degree

0%

10%

20%

30%

40%

50%

60%

70%

80%

College Grad/Post Grad

Some College High School/GED No High School Degree

N=14,102

N=5671

Internet for health purposes

0

10

20

30

40

50

60HINTS 2008, N=998 Internet Users

16.423.3

8.1

52.0

Emailing Providers

Online Rx purchase

Support group participation

Internet as 1st source of health information

Chou, WS et al. 2011. Health-related Internet Use among Cancer Survivors: Data from Health Information National Trends Survey, 2003-2008. J Cancer Survivorship.

National Research Corp. survey: 1 in 5 Americans use social media websites as a source of health care information; 94% respondents reported having using social media to gather health information.

Facebook as 1st choice (94%) and YouTube second (32%).

Use of social media for health information

http://hcmg.nationalresearch.com/public/News.aspx?ID=9

% of Internet users

Reported having: Sample

22.97% Participated in a social networking site

N=1159

4.59% Participated in an online support group

N=232

7.06% Written in a blog N=356

Social media use among Internet users in 2008 (69% of US adult population)

• 250 million > users on facebook worldwide

There’s an app for that!

Users are driving the need for us to develop more usable (

readable/navigable/efficient/entertaining) health communication tools

What app?

Exercise, Nutrition, Smoking Cessation

Online blogging

Find my iPhone

Empowering Communities with Direct Access to Health Data: Patient use of Electronic

Medical Records

Christina Zarcadoolas, PhD, Wendy Vaughon, MPHWith Sara J. Czaja, PhD,

Maxine L. Rockoff, PhD, Joslyn Levy MPANIH R21 1 R21 CA133487-01A2

Common Themes Across Groups (a) • Consumers unanimously very interested in patient

accessible EMRs although most didn’t have access to one.

• Physical access to technology not a primary barrier. • Many participants accessed the internet wirelessly using

mobile technology.

“This is my laptop.” • High interest in lab/test results, but reviewing results,

posed unusually high reading and numeracy demands– “If I could read it and understand it [I would use it] … I

can’t understand it.”

33

Common Themes Across Groups (b)

• Want health education specific to their condition in their records

• Want ‘just-in-time’ links to sources that use understandable language.– “Web MD … that thing is so hard … it

doesn’t really break it down where the average person can understand … some of the translation is in doctor terms … the average person that’s looking at it gets lost.”

34

Access empowers

“Information is power.”

“It all boils down to the same thing … a lot of people don’t take charge of their health because they don’t … remember to take care of themselves and a lot of times they don’t even know at what age they should be checking for what things.”

Common Themes Across Groups (c)

Categories of Barriers

User Characteristics:• Linguistic/reading• Confidence• Navigation• Active reasoning -

cognitive demands

Patient Portal:• Readability• Strategic repetition • Design • Navigability

36

Portal Example - Symbols

Patient Portal - Numeracy

Categories of Opportunities

• Target audience likes and uses social media tools – – Usable layouts– Easy navigation tools – Short, sound byte language – Mouseovers – the define and explain content– Wikis– Google searches – Voice overs– Streaming video – Etc.

Using social media – what is it teaching people?

• Immediacy • Crowdsourcing• Community • Empowerment• Leapfrogging over cumbersome vocabulary

and syntax

Approach to Communication

1. Use health literacy principles to develop content.

2. Use human factors engineering and user-centered design.

3. Use communication modalities and tools people are using in their daily lives.

4. Strive for shared decision making & empowerment

A Paradigm Shift

Past 20 years we’ve focused on identifying what people CAN’T DO

It’s time to focus on identifying what people CAN and ARE doing;

To Achieve -• Virtuous • Honest

• Inclusive Health Literacy