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测量有孩子家庭的可靠互联网连接情况:一项美国全国性调查的二次分析

Measuring Reliable Internet Connectivity Among Families with Children: Secondary Analysis of a US National Survey.

作者信息

Doan Tran T, Schweiberger Kelsey A, Wittman Samuel R, Krishnamurti Tamar, Burns Sarah K, Hanmer Janel, Ray Kristin N

机构信息

Department of Health Systems, Management, and Policy, Colorado School of Public Health, University of Colorado Anschutz Medical Campus, 13001 East 17th Place, Aurora, CO, 80045-2570, United States, 1 3037245050.

Department of Pediatrics, University of Pittsburgh School of Medicine, UPMC Children's Hospital of Pittsburgh, Pittsburgh, PA, United States.

出版信息

J Med Internet Res. 2025 Aug 8;27:e69304. doi: 10.2196/69304.

Abstract

BACKGROUND

Reliable internet connectivity is crucial for family participation in pediatric digital health care, including telehealth. Lack of internet connectivity is a barrier to pediatric telehealth access. While surveys commonly inquire about metrics, such as internet plan or device ownership, fewer measures exist for the reliability of internet connectivity when needed. There is limited knowledge of the national prevalence of reliable internet connectivity among households with children and how reports of reliable internet connectivity are associated with use of internet plans and devices.

OBJECTIVE

We examined the prevalence of reliable internet connectivity among households with children and its association with digital technology access and sociodemographic factors.

METHODS

We performed a secondary data analysis of a US national cross-sectional survey examining parents' health-seeking decisions for children younger than 18 years old. The respondent panel was hosted by the National Opinion Research Center (NORC) AmeriSpeak. This analysis focused on survey items on reliable internet connectivity, digital technology access (internet plan type and device ownership type), and sociodemographic characteristics (education, employment, geographic region, race and ethnicity, and disability) of parent respondents and their children. The dependent variable was a binary indicator of household reliable internet connectivity. Respondents were categorized as having unreliable internet connectivity if they self-reported internet worry or unreliable internet experience. Unadjusted Rao-Scott chi-square tests and adjusted multivariable logistic regressions with sampling weights were applied.

RESULTS

The final survey sample (N=1158) comprised 753 (55%) females, 614 (57%) non-Hispanic White, and 948 (81%) metropolitan respondents. There were 125 (12%) parents who reported internet worry, 152 (13%) parents who reported unreliable internet experience, and 76 (7%) parents who reported both. Combining these measures, we identified 201 (19%) parents with unreliable internet connectivity, defined as reporting either internet worry or unreliable internet experience. In contrast, 957 (81%) parents reported reliable internet connectivity in the household. In adjusted analysis, reliable internet connectivity was significantly associated with owning both nonmobile and mobile internet plans combined (86% reliable internet connectivity) versus nonmobile internet plan-only (67%; P=.001); postgraduate (94%) versus high school education (75%; P<.001); employment (84%) versus unemployment (76%; P=<.01); racial and ethnic marginalized status (77%) versus nonmarginalized (85%; P=<.01); and disability (70%) versus without disability (85%; P<.001), but not with device ownership, geographic region, race and ethnicity as separate groups, or parent sex.

CONCLUSIONS

One-fifth of families with children experienced unreliable internet connectivity, highlighting an important dimension of the digital health divide that appears distinct from internet plan use or device ownership alone. Future research is needed to derive consensus on measuring reliable internet connectivity as a separate metric, including specifying the definition, survey questions, response options, and time frame of unreliability experience. Since reliable internet connectivity is needed for the growing field of digital health care, it is a critical issue for equitable pediatric health care access and delivery.

摘要

背景

可靠的互联网连接对于家庭参与儿科数字医疗保健(包括远程医疗)至关重要。缺乏互联网连接是获取儿科远程医疗服务的障碍。虽然调查通常会询问诸如互联网套餐或设备拥有情况等指标,但针对所需时互联网连接可靠性的衡量标准却较少。对于有孩子家庭中可靠互联网连接的全国患病率以及可靠互联网连接报告与互联网套餐和设备使用之间的关联,我们了解有限。

目的

我们研究了有孩子家庭中可靠互联网连接的患病率及其与数字技术获取和社会人口学因素的关联。

方法

我们对一项美国全国性横断面调查进行了二次数据分析,该调查考察了18岁以下儿童家长的就医决策。受访者小组由美国国家民意研究中心(NORC)的美国民意调查样本组成。该分析聚焦于有关可靠互联网连接、数字技术获取(互联网套餐类型和设备拥有类型)以及家长受访者及其子女的社会人口学特征(教育程度、就业情况、地理区域、种族和民族以及残疾状况)的调查项目。因变量是家庭可靠互联网连接的二元指标。如果受访者自我报告有网络担忧或不可靠的网络体验,则被归类为互联网连接不可靠。应用了未调整的Rao-Scott卡方检验和使用抽样权重的调整后多变量逻辑回归。

结果

最终调查样本(N = 1158)包括753名(55%)女性、614名(57%)非西班牙裔白人以及948名(81%)大都市地区的受访者。有125名(12%)家长报告有网络担忧,152名(13%)家长报告有不可靠的网络体验,76名(7%)家长两者都报告了。综合这些指标,我们确定了201名(19%)互联网连接不可靠的家长,定义为报告有网络担忧或不可靠的网络体验。相比之下,957名(81%)家长报告家庭中有可靠的互联网连接。在调整分析中,可靠的互联网连接与同时拥有非移动和移动互联网套餐(86%的可靠互联网连接)相比仅拥有非移动互联网套餐(67%;P = 0.001)显著相关;研究生学历(94%)与高中学历(75%;P < 0.001);就业(84%)与失业(76%;P = < 0.01);种族和民族边缘化状态(77%)与非边缘化状态(85%;P = < 0.01);以及残疾(70%)与无残疾(85%;P < 0.001)显著相关,但与设备拥有情况、地理区域、作为单独群体的种族和民族或家长性别无关。

结论

五分之一有孩子的家庭经历过不可靠的互联网连接,这凸显了数字健康差距的一个重要方面,它似乎与单纯的互联网套餐使用或设备拥有情况不同。未来需要开展研究,就将可靠互联网连接作为一个单独指标进行衡量达成共识,包括明确不可靠体验的定义、调查问题、回答选项和时间框架。由于数字医疗保健这一不断发展的领域需要可靠的互联网连接,因此它是公平获取和提供儿科医疗保健的关键问题。

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