# Relationship between digital health literacy and self-assessment of health among older adults in Xuzhou City: based on the mediating effect of health self-management

**Authors:** Zhaohui Qin, Huangying Shen, Yan Xu, Hongan Zhang, Xiliang Li, Zhiwen Zhao, Yichen Li, Wenhao Huang

PMC · DOI: 10.3389/fpubh.2026.1744492 · Frontiers in Public Health · 2026-03-18

## TL;DR

This study explores how digital health literacy affects older adults' health self-management and overall health in Xuzhou City, China.

## Contribution

It identifies health self-management as a key mediator linking digital health literacy to better self-assessed health in older adults.

## Key findings

- Digital health literacy positively predicts self-assessed physical health among older adults.
- Health self-management fully mediates the relationship between digital health literacy and self-assessed health.
- Significant correlations exist between digital health literacy, health self-management, and self-assessed health.

## Abstract

With the global rise in aging populations and the proliferation of digital technologies, digital health literacy has emerged as a critical determinant of older adults’ ability to access health information and enhance their health outcomes. This study investigates the complex interplay and mechanisms linking digital health literacy, health self-management, and self-assessed physical health among older adults in Xuzhou, China.

In November 2024, a questionnaire-based survey was conducted among adults aged 60 and older in urban communities of Xuzhou City, Jiangsu Province, China. The questionnaire assessed general demographic characteristics, self-assessed physical health, the Chinese version of the Digital Health Literacy Scale, and the Health Self-Management Scale. A total of 1,005 participants were included, comprising 47% males and 53% females, with a mean age of 67.6 years. Data were analyzed using SPSS 23 software.

The mean scores for self-assessed physical health, digital health literacy, and health self-management were 3.41 ± 0.83, 24.75 ± 11.74, and 159.72 ± 21.24, respectively. Statistically significant differences were observed in these scores across age groups, marital status, pre-retirement occupation, number of medications, living arrangement, monthly disposable income, and daily internet use (all p < 0.05). Digital health literacy, health self-management, and self-assessed physical health were significantly positively correlated (all p < 0.01). Digital health literacy positively predicted self-assessed physical health (β = 0.007, p = 0.041). Health self-management fully mediated the relationship between digital health literacy and self-assessed physical health, with an indirect effect of 0.005 (95% Bootstrap confidence interval 0.003–0.007), accounting for 71.4% of the total effect.

The findings indicate that digital health literacy positively influences health self-management among older adults. Moreover, through the mediating role of health self-management, digital health literacy contributes to improvements in health behaviors and overall health status among older adults.

## Full text

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## References

48 references — full list in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC13039007/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC13039007