1. Introduction
Internet use has rapidly become a common activity for young people [
1], and adolescents have integrated Internet use into many aspects of their daily lives [
2]. Because of its characteristics of anonymity and privacy, the Internet has become an important source of knowledge for young people, who use it as a tool for education and access to health information [
3].
According to a survey by the National Center for Health Statistics (HCHS), 61% of American adults (18–64 years) search for health information online, but more than 70% of the information obtained is incorrect [
4]. Parents are often adolescents’ main source of health information, but because of poor health literacy among both parents [
5] and adolescents, young people mistakenly believe Internet misinformation about health. Therefore, increased attention to adolescents’ Internet health information acquisition environment is important [
6,
7].
“The ability to seek, find, understand, and appraise health information from electronic sources and apply the knowledge gained to addressing or solving a health problem”, Norman and Skinner defined eHealth Literacy in 2006 [
8]. Because eHealth Literacy and Media Health Literacy are critical for enabling individuals to actively participate in their own health, there is a growing body of work examining the potential and efficacy of treatments to improve these abilities [
9].
According to a study, 52–80 percent of Internet users look for health information on the internet. People are aware that health information found on the Internet is not always accurate, but there is no way to properly determine if the material is accurate. The research only looks for adult-related research [
10]. Another research evaluated the eHealth Literacy of two ethnic groups: traditional college students (18–22 years old) and older adult students (55–72 years old). The study’s findings suggest that conventional college students frequently utilize websites to solve health concerns, whereas older adult students communicate health information using communication software [
11].
The capacity to read and understand electronic health information is critical, especially in light of the COVID-19 epidemic. According to a poll of 1074 persons in the United States, the majority of adults have inadequate eHealth Literacy when it comes to coronavirus. The author thinks that the quality of COVID-19 information on the Internet should be increased, or that health information search abilities should be enhanced [
12]. Another eHealth Literacy survey in the United States found that just 49.1 % of Internet users (aged 55 and over) had strong eHealth Literacy. The study also advised that education for older individuals (55 and up) should be enhanced. Literacy in eHealth [
13].
However, adolescent eHealth Literacy has received little attention [
14], and more research is critically needed. The means by which adolescents seek online health information, as well as their capacity to recognize incorrect information and the factors that influence the type and content of health information requested, were investigated in this study.
2. Materials and Methods
2.1. Study Population
Students in two classes at a public junior high school and high school in Taipei, Taiwan, were randomly selected in a stratified manner based on student status and grade for participation in a cross-sectional questionnaire survey. A total of 500 copies of the questionnaire were issued, 437 of which were recovered, yielding a recovery rate of 87%. Among the respondents, female students constituted the majority (57%), and the age range was 13–20 years (
Table 1).
2.2. Questionnaire
The questionnaire contained three parts: (1) basic information; (2) Internet usage; and (3) Internet health and hygiene information usage. The content of the questionnaire was reviewed by two experts in the field of health information (expert validity) who provided revision recommendations after reviewing the completed questionnaires of five junior high school and high school students. The ethical approval from the Tri-Service General Hospital’s Institutional Review Board, with the number “TSGH-1-105-05-081”.
2.3. Importance-Performance Analysis
The importance-performance analysis (IPA) method was adopted to analyze the adolescents’ assessment of the importance of and satisfaction with health information channels. In this method, the Y-axis represents satisfaction, the X-axis represents importance, and four quadrants are generated based on importance and satisfaction. Of these, Quadrant I is the area with high importance and high satisfaction, Quadrant II is the area with low importance and high satisfaction, Quadrant III is the area with low importance and low satisfaction, and Quadrant IV is the area with high importance and low satisfaction, representing an area requiring active improvement.
2.4. Statistical Analysis
Descriptive statistics were used to analyze differences in the distribution of demographic variables, Internet usage, Internet search channels, and health information queries between junior high school and high school students and between male and female students. Differences between classes and genders were tested using Student’s t-test or the chi-square test, and significance was set at p < 0.05. Statistical analyses were performed using the Statistical analysis software SPSS 18.
3. Results
3.1. Internet Use: First Use, Frequency, and Purpose
More than 95% of the adolescents started accessing the Internet before or in elementary school, more than 80% of the students spent more than one hour on the Internet per online session on average in the past month, and approximately 90% of the students used the Internet at least once in a week on average (
Table 2). Most of the students used the Internet at home (95.9%) (
Table 3), mostly for entertainment(
Table 4), and most often searched for video and audio content(
Table 5). The frequency at which the students browsed health-related news or information per week was low, and 70% of the adolescents browsed health-related news or information less than once per week (
Table 6). The purpose of Internet use and the content browsed differed by age and gender (
Table 4 and
Table 5).
3.2. Internet Usage Frequency and Advantages by Gender
The students’ main sources of health-related information included television news, the Internet, and teachers (
Table 7). More boys used the Internet to seek health information than girls in junior high schools (
p = 0.009). The health content searched by junior high school girls included “weight loss” (p < 0.001) and “beauty and health” (
p < 0.001). The health content searched by high school girls included “mental health” (
p = 0.004), “weight loss” (
p < 0.001), and “beauty and health” (
p < 0.001). (
p < 0.001). The health content searched by high school boys included “sex knowledge” (
p < 0.001). More than 90% of the students used the Internet to seek health information because the Internet provides instant and convenient access to the latest information without time limits. More than 90% of the students wanted health information sites to have a search function with clearly defined categories of website contents that are updated regularly and credible.
3.3. Ability to Identify False Health Information
We randomly selected five pieces of health information that have been widely circulated on the Internet, and the respondents were asked to indicate whether they were true or false. More than 80% (80~94%) of the students were able to correctly answer four of the five questions, but only 59.2% of the students provided a correct answer regarding the item “fruits and vegetables that are darker in color are more nutritious!”, a commonly reported piece of information, indicating that a fact’s frequency of presentation and students’ ability to identify it as correct are not correlated. We found that 67.2% of adolescents applied health information acquired from the Internet in everyday life (
Table 8).
3.4. Channels of Health Information Acquisition
Yahoo! Answers, Google, Wikipedia were the top three online sites that the adolescents used for health information, while the health websites of private institutions were used the least often, followed by the health websites of public institutions and bulletin board systems (BBSs). The participants attached more importance to and were more satisfied with health information provided by the top three online sites than with that provided by public and private health websites and BBSs. The male junior high school students’ responses indicated that they found public health websites to be unimportant channels with low satisfaction; among the other groups, public and private health websites were generally considered overemphasized, offering fair satisfaction but low importance.
3.5. Content of Health Information Queries by Gender
Most of the Internet health information content browsed by young people pertained to sports, fitness, and medical knowledge. The contents of health information queries varied according to the students’ age and gender. Female students were more interested in weight loss, beauty, and health than male students, while high school students more frequently searched for content in all categories than junior high school students (
Table 9), indicating that the demand for health information increases with age.
The adolescents regarded most health information content as important and satisfying and were most interested in medical knowledge and sports and fitness. The junior high school students placed sexual knowledge in Quadrant 2 (overemphasized), with acceptable satisfaction but low importance, while the high school students viewed such knowledge as very important with acceptable satisfaction, placing it in Quadrant 1. Female high school students were more interested in and satisfied with beauty, health, and weight loss information than male high school students. Male and female students did not differ significantly in health awareness. The other pieces of health information mostly fell within Quadrant 1, with high satisfaction and high importance.
3.6. Search Channels and Health Issues
In different search engines, trending queries regarding health issues varied. Yahoo! Answers users searched for “sports and fitness” information more frequently, while Google and Wikipedia users searched for all health topics more frequently. Among Google queries, “weight loss” was the most frequent search topic, while among Wikipedia searches, “mental health” was the most frequent. BBS users browsed “sexual knowledge” most frequently. However, the information sources of BBSs are diverse, and government agencies should strengthen supervision to prevent adolescents from receiving incorrect information. For public and private health websites, queries on all health topics except for “sexual knowledge” were less frequent (
Figure 1).
3.7. Chuchiming Index
The chuchiming index calculates the formula of (satisfaction order—importance or-der)/importance order which Prof. Dr. Chu has developed [
15] and
Table 10 shows that the important information of perceiving targets are Private websites (chuchiming index = 0.20) and Wikipedia (chuchiming index = 0.50) in junior girls, and private websites (chuchiming index = 0.20) and Wikipedia (chuchiming index = 0.50) in senior girls, and BBS/PTT (chuchiming index = 0.50) in senior boys. Shifting resources are BBS/PTT [
16] (chuchiming index = −0.17) and Google (chuchiming index = −0.33) in junior girls, BBS/PTT (chuchiming index = −0.17) and Yahoo (chuchiming index = −0.33) in senior girls, private (chuchiming index = −0.17) and public websites (chuchiming index = −0.20) in senior boys. Balancing items are, which chuchiming index is equal to 0, public websites in girls, Google, Wikipedia and Yahoo in boys.
4. Discussion
Adolescents attach importance to and are satisfied with Internet content regarding most health topics, especially “medical knowledge” and “sports and fitness”. Students of different age groups and genders differ in their Internet usage and preferred health information search channels and in the content they seek. Male students are less interested in weight loss than female students [
17] (
Figure 1). Women have been reported to be more concerned about birth control, diet and nutrition, exercise, physical abuse, sexual abuse, and dating violence [
17]. Many studies have shown that adolescents have low trust in online knowledge [
18,
19,
20,
21], which is consistent with the results of this study.
Because adolescents have fewer health problems than adults, they browse health information less frequently and spend less time interacting with it [
21]. Coupled with their poor ability to identify correct Internet information [
22], these behaviors reflect the urgent need to provide a quality Internet health information environment for adolescents. For example, the global COVID-19 pandemic has caused fear among the public about emerging infectious diseases, and as a result, a broad range of misinformation has spread throughout traditional media [
23,
24,
25,
26,
27,
28], affecting both the physical and mental health of the general public [
29].
Regarding Internet misinformation, scholars believe that the mass media, healthcare organizations, community-based organizations, and other important stakeholders should establish strategic partnerships and collaboration platforms to release relevant local public health information that can help Internet users identify correct Internet health information through technologies, such as natural language learning and processing and data mining [
29] and should detect and remove Internet misinformation through use ratings, comments, or expert explanations [
30,
31], which should be regulated and implemented through legislation [
29]. For example, the Taiwanese government recently took initiative in cooperating with LINE, a social media platform, to verify text messages through artificial intelligence (AI) and machine learning [
32] in an effort to solicit more good ideas.
Google, Wikipedia, and Yahoo! Answers are highly regarded search engines for health information among young people. In contrast, some dedicated health sites established by public or private institutions are rarely used and are considered unimportant health information search channels, likely because (1) people do not know which public health information sites to visit when searching for a health information topic or (2) their data query platforms are not user-friendly or do not provide results sufficiently rapidly. Most public and private health sites are inadequate in query function and health data and are not on par with Google, Wikipedia, and Yahoo! Answers. Therefore, public and private health sites should reposition themselves in the Internet health education of adolescents and strengthen their ability to identify and correct Internet misinformation.
5. Conclusions
For adolescents, eHealth Literacy has become a key skill in terms of health information. Given adolescents’ limited ability to recognize accurate Internet health information and the abundance of misinformation on the Internet, providing accurate Internet health information and correcting Internet misinformation are becoming increasingly important issues in online health education for adolescents.
According to the findings of this study, young people’s usage of government-created health websites is less regular, important, and satisfied than their use of websites like Qimo, Google, or Wikipedia. These platforms can be used by relevant departments to promote accurate health information. Furthermore, the management of these websites with large usage rates should be strengthened in order to prevent misinformation from being used to mislead young people.