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Primary health‐care nurses and Internet health information‐seeking: Access,barriers and quality checks
Authors:Jean Gilmour RN PhD  Alison Strong RN  MN   Helen Chan RN  BHSc    MN   Sue Hanna MA Social Work PhD  Annette Huntington RN PhD
Affiliation:1. School of Nursing, Massey University, Wellington, New Zealand;2. Hawke's Bay District Health Board, Hastings, New Zealand;3. , Melbourne, Victoria, Australia;4. Department of Mental Health, Social Work & Interprofessional Learning, Middlesex University, London, UK
Abstract:Online information is a critical resource for evidence‐based practice and patient education. This study aimed to establish New Zealand nurses' access and evaluation of online health information in the primary care context using a postal questionnaire survey; there were 630 respondents from a random sample of 931 nurses. The majority of respondents were satisfied with work access to online information (84.5%, n = 501) and searched for online information at least several times a week (57.5%, n = 343). The major barrier to online information seeking was insufficient time, but 68 respondents had no work online information access. The level of nursing qualification was significantly correlated with computer confidence and information quality checking. A range of information evaluation approaches was used. Most nurses in study accessed and evaluated Internet information in contrast to the findings of earlier studies, but there were barriers preventing universal integration into practice.
Keywords:information literacy  Internet  nurses  primary health care  survey
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