COVID-digital health literacy and subjective well-being of students in Ghana: Mediation-moderation analyses

Quansah F, Ankomah F, Agormedah EK, Abieraba RSK, Srem-Sai M, Hagan Jr. JE, Okan O, Dadaczynski K, Schack T (2022)
Health Science Reports 5(6): 1-10.

Zeitschriftenaufsatz | Veröffentlicht | Englisch
 
Download
OA 963.21 KB
Autor*in
Quansah, Frank; Ankomah, Francis; Agormedah, Edmond K.; Abieraba, Richard S. K.; Srem-Sai, Medina; Hagan Jr., John ElvisUniBi; Okan, Orkan; Dadaczynski, Kevin; Schack, ThomasUniBi
Abstract / Bemerkung
BackgroundPrevious research has established a strong association between COVID-19 digital health literacy (DHL) and subjective well-being among several populations, including students. With the growing misinformation and heightened fear of COVID-19 among persons with an underlying medical condition, several scholars have questioned the direct relationship between DHL and well-being. This study assessed the moderating roles of information accuracy concerns and the existence of an underlying medical condition among students. MethodsUsing a cross-sectional design, a multi-stage sampling approach was used to select 1392 students from senior high schools in Northern Ghana who completed a questionnaire containing information on DHL, information accuracy, subjective well-being, and underlying health condition, with reported internal consistency coefficients above 0.70. The data which was processed with SPSS version 25, was analyzed using correlation (Pearson and biserial), and Hayes' PROCESS for the moderation and mediation analyses. ResultsA significant positive relationship was found between (a) DHL and subjective well-being, (b) DHL and information accuracy concerns, and (c) information accuracy concerns and subjective well-being. However, the prevalence of underlying health condition was negatively associated with information accuracy, DHL, and subjective well-being. Information accuracy concerns and the existence of an underlying medical condition significantly regulated the relationship between DHL and subjective well-being. ConclusionsDemonstrating satisfactory levels of DHL does not necessarily result in improved subjective well-being. However, emphasis should be placed on whether individuals attach much importance to the accuracy of information retrieved as well as having or not an underlying health condition.
Stichworte
computer literacy; COVID-19; health literacy; health status; infodemic; information seeking behaviour; mental health; students
Erscheinungsjahr
2022
Zeitschriftentitel
Health Science Reports
Band
5
Ausgabe
6
Seite(n)
1-10
eISSN
2398-8835
Page URI
https://pub.uni-bielefeld.de/record/2967388

Zitieren

Quansah F, Ankomah F, Agormedah EK, et al. COVID-digital health literacy and subjective well-being of students in Ghana: Mediation-moderation analyses. Health Science Reports . 2022;5(6):1-10.
Quansah, F., Ankomah, F., Agormedah, E. K., Abieraba, R. S. K., Srem-Sai, M., Hagan Jr., J. E., Okan, O., et al. (2022). COVID-digital health literacy and subjective well-being of students in Ghana: Mediation-moderation analyses. Health Science Reports , 5(6), 1-10. https://doi.org/10.1002/hsr2.916
Quansah, Frank, Ankomah, Francis, Agormedah, Edmond K., Abieraba, Richard S. K., Srem-Sai, Medina, Hagan Jr., John Elvis, Okan, Orkan, Dadaczynski, Kevin, and Schack, Thomas. 2022. “COVID-digital health literacy and subjective well-being of students in Ghana: Mediation-moderation analyses”. Health Science Reports 5 (6): 1-10.
Quansah, F., Ankomah, F., Agormedah, E. K., Abieraba, R. S. K., Srem-Sai, M., Hagan Jr., J. E., Okan, O., Dadaczynski, K., and Schack, T. (2022). COVID-digital health literacy and subjective well-being of students in Ghana: Mediation-moderation analyses. Health Science Reports 5, 1-10.
Quansah, F., et al., 2022. COVID-digital health literacy and subjective well-being of students in Ghana: Mediation-moderation analyses. Health Science Reports , 5(6), p 1-10.
F. Quansah, et al., “COVID-digital health literacy and subjective well-being of students in Ghana: Mediation-moderation analyses”, Health Science Reports , vol. 5, 2022, pp. 1-10.
Quansah, F., Ankomah, F., Agormedah, E.K., Abieraba, R.S.K., Srem-Sai, M., Hagan Jr., J.E., Okan, O., Dadaczynski, K., Schack, T.: COVID-digital health literacy and subjective well-being of students in Ghana: Mediation-moderation analyses. Health Science Reports . 5, 1-10 (2022).
Quansah, Frank, Ankomah, Francis, Agormedah, Edmond K., Abieraba, Richard S. K., Srem-Sai, Medina, Hagan Jr., John Elvis, Okan, Orkan, Dadaczynski, Kevin, and Schack, Thomas. “COVID-digital health literacy and subjective well-being of students in Ghana: Mediation-moderation analyses”. Health Science Reports 5.6 (2022): 1-10.
Alle Dateien verfügbar unter der/den folgenden Lizenz(en):
Creative Commons Namensnennung 4.0 International Public License (CC-BY 4.0):
Volltext(e)
Access Level
OA Open Access
Zuletzt Hochgeladen
2023-03-09T14:58:37Z
MD5 Prüfsumme
c6483314edb7b691533435d0e8139772


Export

Markieren/ Markierung löschen
Markierte Publikationen

Open Data PUB

Web of Science

Dieser Datensatz im Web of Science®
Quellen

PMID: 36425902
PubMed | Europe PMC

Suchen in

Google Scholar