Exploring older adults' health information seeking behaviors.

Elizabeth Manafo, Sharon Wong
Author Information
  1. Elizabeth Manafo: Faculty of Community Services, School of Nutrition, Ryerson University, Toronto, Canada. emanafo@ryerson.ca

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: To explore older adults' (55-70 years) health information-seeking behaviors.
METHODS: Using a qualitative methodology, based on grounded theory, data were collected using in-depth interviews. Participants were community-living, older adults in Toronto, Canada who independently seek nutrition and health information. Interview transcripts were analyzed using a qualitative thematic coding framework.
RESULTS: Twenty participants were interviewed, at which point theoretical saturation of data was achieved. Three themes describing older adults' health information-seeking behaviors emerged. This article will focus on one theme: the enabling and disabling experience of seeking nutrition and health information to support an understanding of successful aging in this population.
CONCLUSIONS AND IMPLICATIONS: These findings are framed within the context of supporting older adults' information-seeking behaviors to contribute to their health and well-being. This is a relevant issue to public health professionals given the global emphasis on successful aging strategies.

MeSH Term

Age Factors
Aged
Female
Humans
Information Seeking Behavior
Male
Middle Aged
Patient Acceptance of Health Care

Word Cloud

Created with Highcharts 10.0.0healtholderadults'behaviorsinformation-seekinginformationqualitativedatausingnutritionseekingsuccessfulagingOBJECTIVE:explore55-70yearsMETHODS:Usingmethodologybasedgroundedtheorycollectedin-depthinterviewsParticipantscommunity-livingadultsTorontoCanadaindependentlyseekInterviewtranscriptsanalyzedthematiccodingframeworkRESULTS:TwentyparticipantsinterviewedpointtheoreticalsaturationachievedThreethemesdescribingemergedarticlewillfocusonetheme:enablingdisablingexperiencesupportunderstandingpopulationCONCLUSIONSANDIMPLICATIONS:findingsframedwithincontextsupportingcontributewell-beingrelevantissuepublicprofessionalsgivenglobalemphasisstrategiesExploring

Similar Articles

Cited By