The Association Between Internet Use and Co-occurring Health Care Needs: Cross-Sectional Study in China
Yiqing Xing, Xuejiao Liu, Liang Zhang, Ruibo He

TL;DR
This study explores how internet use in China is linked to multiple health care needs and suggests that health policies should adapt to these changing needs.
Contribution
The study introduces a novel analysis of how internet use frequency correlates with co-occurring health care needs and identifies mediating factors like physical exercise and health status.
Findings
86.74% of participants had two or more co-occurring health care needs.
Frequent internet use was positively associated with more co-occurring health care needs.
Improved health status was negatively correlated with co-occurring health care needs.
Abstract
The need for health care underpins health care service provision and serves as the foundation for enhancing service capacity and allocating resources. Health care needs are influenced by health, social, and economic conditions and may exhibit different characteristics over time. However, previous studies have primarily focused on specific populations or types of needs, overlooking the diversity and complexity of residents’ health care requirements. Furthermore, as informatization becomes a defining aspect of modern social development, the impact of internet utilization on the co-occurrence of health care needs remains unclear. This study aims to determine the co-occurrence of health care needs among residents in China, explore the relationship between internet use frequency and co-occurring health care needs, and analyze the potential pathways of influence. Data were obtained from the…
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Taxonomy
TopicsMobile Health and mHealth Applications · Health Literacy and Information Accessibility · Technology Use by Older Adults
