Detailed Information on Publication Record
2023
Health anxiety in adolescents: the roles of online health information seeking and parental health anxiety
ŠVESTKOVÁ, Adéla, Nikol KVARDOVÁ and David ŠMAHELBasic information
Original name
Health anxiety in adolescents: the roles of online health information seeking and parental health anxiety
Authors
Edition
37th Annual Conference of European Health Psychology Society (EHPS), 2023
Other information
Language
English
Type of outcome
Prezentace na konferencích
Field of Study
50101 Psychology
Country of publisher
Czech Republic
Confidentiality degree
není předmětem státního či obchodního tajemství
References:
Organization unit
Faculty of Social Studies
Keywords in English
adolescence; health anxiety; online health information seeking; parent child relationship; eHealth literacy
Změněno: 8/1/2024 15:02, Mgr. Adéla Švestková
Abstract
V originále
Health anxiety can negatively affect psychological well-being through rumination and safety measures. For adolescents, parental health anxiety presents a known social factor of health anxiety. Online health information seeking serves as another risk factor, but this has never been tested for adolescents. Our aim was to study both factors and their relationship with adolescent health anxiety in a single model. Furthermore, we included eHealth literacy as a moderator between health information seeking and health anxiety. Using SEM, we analysed a cross-sectional sample of 1,530 adolescents, 50% girls, aged 13-18 (M=15.4, SD=1.7) and their caregivers, 68% women, aged 29-75 (M=45, SD=6.4). The participants represented Czech households with children in terms of income, municipality size and region. Parental and adolescent health anxiety were positively related (β=.40, p<.001). Seeking for disease information was also positively related to adolescent health anxiety (β=.23, p<.001), while the effect of fitness information seeking was only marginal (β=.08, p=.02). eHealth literacy did not moderate either disease (b=-0.06, p=.14) or fitness information seeking (b=-0.08, p=.06). Our data fitted the model adequately, CFI=.94, TLI=.93, RMSEA=.06, SRMR=.05. Our findings underline the relationship between parental and adolescent health anxiety and suggest that we must acknowledge the state of caregivers to successfully address adolescent health anxiety. We newly show that disease information seeking presents another factor related to adolescent health anxiety and that this is regardless of the level of eHealth literacy. Future research could focus on the potential interplay of the role of parents and online seeking in adolescent health anxiety.
Links
GX19-27828X, research and development project |
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