Differences in rural and urban health information access and use Journal Article


Authors: Chen, X.; Orom, H.; Hay, J. L.; Waters, E. A.; Schofield, E.; Li, Y.; Kiviniemi, M. T.
Article Title: Differences in rural and urban health information access and use
Abstract: Purpose: Rural residents may have lower access to and use of certain health information sources relative to urban residents. We investigated differences in information source access and use between rural and urban US adults and whether having low health literacy might exacerbate rural disparities in access to and use of health information. Methods: Six hundred participants (50% rural) completed an online survey about access and use of 25 health information sources. We used logistic regression models to test associations between rurality and access to and use of health information sources and whether rurality interacted with health literacy to predict the access and use. Findings: Compared to urban residents, rural residents had lower access to health information from sources including primary care providers, specialist doctors, blogs, and magazines, and less use of search engines. After accounting for sociodemographics, rural residents only had lower access to specialist doctors than urban residents. Rural residents with limited health literacy had lower access to mass media and scientific literature but higher use of corporations/companies than rural residents with adequate health literacy and urban residents regardless of health literacy level. Conclusions: Some differences in access to and use of health information sources may be accounted for by sociodemographic differences between rural and urban populations. There may be structural barriers such as shortage of specialist doctors and limited media exposure that make it harder for rural residents to access health information, especially those with limited health literacy. © 2018 National Rural Health Association
Keywords: adult; controlled study; major clinical study; rural population; medical information; primary medical care; mass medium; urban population; human experiment; scientific literature; health literacy; search engine; urban health; human; male; female; article; health information access; health information use; rural-urban health disparities
Journal Title: Journal of Rural Health
Volume: 35
Issue: 3
ISSN: 0890-765X
Publisher: Wiley-Blackwell Publishing, Inc.  
Date Published: 2019-01-01
Start Page: 405
End Page: 417
Language: English
DOI: 10.1111/jrh.12335
PUBMED: 30444935
PROVIDER: scopus
PMCID: PMC6522336
DOI/URL:
Notes: The publisher's record lists the publication date as Summer 2019 -- Article -- Source: Scopus
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MSK Authors
  1. Yuelin Li
    219 Li
  2. Jennifer L Hay
    264 Hay
  3. Elizabeth A Schofield
    161 Schofield