Information and Health Literacy in the Balance: Findings from a Study Exploring the Use of ICTs in Weight Management

This article uses findings from a UK Department of Health funded research study known as Net.Weight to reflect on the concept of information literacy as it relates to consumer health. It explores how the results support and develop an understanding of information and health literacy and it offers recommendations for policy and practice. The study was located in the city of Brighton & Hove and examined the potential for information and communication technologies (ICTs) to support people who were self-managing their weight. The research comprised five interlocking components, at the heart of which was a series of participatory learning workshops designed to develop participant skills in relation to ICTs, information, and health literacy. The results indicate that a broader and more social understanding of information literacy is needed to ensure a better “fit” between the provision and use of health information. They also indicate that ICTs can augment information provision and support activities, but that a “blended” approach is necessary, where online and “real world” communication work in tandem.

[1]  Cameron D. Norman,et al.  eHealth Literacy: Essential Skills for Consumer Health in a Networked World , 2006, Journal of medical Internet research.

[2]  Bob Gann,et al.  Information for Health , 1999, Health expectations : an international journal of public participation in health care and health policy.

[3]  L. A. Marshall,et al.  Health information: does quality count for the consumer? , 2006, J. Libr. Inf. Sci..

[4]  Linda Little,et al.  E-health , 2008, BCS HCI.

[5]  Marc Berg,et al.  Looking for answers, constructing reliability: An exploration into how Dutch patients check web-based medical information , 2006, Int. J. Medical Informatics.

[6]  D. Nutbeam The evolving concept of health literacy. , 2008, Social science & medicine.

[7]  Marsha Dowda,et al.  Active for life: final results from the translation of two physical activity programs. , 2008, American journal of preventive medicine.

[8]  Bill Johnston,et al.  As We May Think: Information Literacy as a Discipline for the Information Age. , 2005 .

[9]  C. Kuhlthau From Information to Meaning: Confronting Challenges of the Twenty-first Century , 2008 .

[10]  R. Cullen Empowering patients through health information literacy training , 2005 .

[11]  M Kumar,et al.  NHS direct. , 2000, British dental journal.

[12]  Paul Krause,et al.  Liberating the NHS: an information revolution--think beyond the electronic patient record, think service orientated architecture! , 2010, Informatics in primary care.

[13]  D Charnock,et al.  Helping patients access high quality health information , 1999, BMJ.

[14]  R. Fleming Equity and Excellence: liberating the NHS , 2010 .

[15]  More people, more active, more often , 1995 .

[16]  Information prescriptions. , 2010, Nursing management.

[17]  F. Henwood,et al.  In the Balance: Report of a Research Study Exploring Information for Weight Management , 2010 .

[18]  Denis J. Protti,et al.  A proposal to use a balanced scorecard to evaluate Information for Health: an information strategy for the modern NHS (1998-2005) , 2002, Comput. Biol. Medicine.

[19]  Lynda M. Baker,et al.  The Medical Library Association guide to health literacy , 2008 .

[20]  Peter Williams,et al.  Characterising the Health Information Consumer: An Examination of Digital Television Users , 2002 .

[21]  Peter Williams,et al.  Perceptions of the authority of health information. Case study: digital interactive television and the Internet. , 2003, Health information and libraries journal.

[22]  J. Puntis,et al.  Liberating the NHS? , 2010, Archives of Disease in Childhood.

[23]  R. Hughes The NHS Constitution , 2009 .

[24]  Bill Johnston,et al.  Conceptions of information literacy: new perspectives and implications , 2000, J. Inf. Sci..

[25]  Peter Williams,et al.  NHS Direct Online: its users and their concerns , 2002, J. Inf. Sci..

[26]  Mark Duman,et al.  The state of consumer health information: an overview. , 2009, Health information and libraries journal.

[27]  Sue Childs,et al.  Developing health website quality assessment guidelines for the voluntary sector: outcomes from the Judge Project. , 2004, Health information and libraries journal.

[28]  Pamela J. McKenzie A model of information practices in accounts of everyday-life information seeking , 2003, J. Documentation.

[29]  D. Nutbeam,et al.  Health promotion glossary (1998) , 1998 .

[30]  Eilean Craig Better informed for better health and better care: an information literacy framework to support health care in Scotland. , 2009, Health information and libraries journal.