Plugged-in: a Canadian survey of technology ownership, access, use, and attitudes among emergency department patients
Aisling Curtin Wach, Krutika Joshi, Christina Seo, Pete Wegier

TL;DR
This study surveyed emergency department patients in Toronto to assess their technology ownership and attitudes, finding high digital access and positive views despite diversity.
Contribution
The study provides new insights into digital health readiness among ethnoculturally diverse ED patients in a Canadian urban setting.
Findings
97.6% of participants owned at least one digital device, with high rates of smartphone, email, and internet use.
Participants had generally positive attitudes toward technology (mean 4.2/5) with few reported barriers.
No significant differences in technology access were found based on participants' place of residence.
Abstract
Patient-facing digital health technologies have the capacity to remedy some of the challenges faced by overburdened and under-resourced Canadian emergency departments (ED). However, the successful implementation of such innovations is dependent on patients' willingness and ability to access and use digital technologies. Moreover, the potential presence of digital disparities in local communities may create or exacerbate inequitable health outcomes. This study aimed to understand technology ownership, access, use, and attitudes among ED patients of a digitally innovative hospital located in an ethnoculturally diverse, urban area of Toronto. An electronic, self-report, cross-sectional survey was conducted in the ED of an urban, community hospital in Toronto. A convenience sample of ED patients over the age of 18 and proficient in English were invited to participate in the survey between…
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Taxonomy
TopicsMobile Health and mHealth Applications · Health Literacy and Information Accessibility · Technology Use by Older Adults
