Differences in mobile health app use: A source of new digital inequalities?

Abstract

This article provides a more differentiated understanding of mobile health consumers, and considers whether health app use may contribute to new digital inequalities. It focuses on factors associated with mobile health app use, and identifies which factors explain the use of different types of health apps. Data from a large representative sample of the Dutch population (N = 1,079) show that mobile health app users were generally younger, higher educated, and had higher levels of e-health literacy skills than non-users. Interestingly, different usage patterns were found for specific types of health apps. Theory and policy implications are discussed.

digital inequalities, e-health, frontpage, mobile health apps, Privacy

Bibtex

Article{Bol2018, title = {Differences in mobile health app use: A source of new digital inequalities?}, author = {Bol, N. and Helberger, N. and Weert, J.C.M.}, url = {https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/full/10.1080/01972243.2018.1438550}, year = {0501}, date = {2018-05-01}, journal = {The Information Society}, volume = {2018}, number = {3}, pages = {}, abstract = {This article provides a more differentiated understanding of mobile health consumers, and considers whether health app use may contribute to new digital inequalities. It focuses on factors associated with mobile health app use, and identifies which factors explain the use of different types of health apps. Data from a large representative sample of the Dutch population (N = 1,079) show that mobile health app users were generally younger, higher educated, and had higher levels of e-health literacy skills than non-users. Interestingly, different usage patterns were found for specific types of health apps. Theory and policy implications are discussed.}, keywords = {digital inequalities, e-health, frontpage, mobile health apps, Privacy}, }