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Parents' Use of Social Media for Health Information Before and After a Consultation With Health Care Professionals: Australian Cross-Sectional Study.

Erika FreyCatriona BonfiglioliJane Elizabeth Frawley
Published in: JMIR pediatrics and parenting (2023)
Using social media for child health information is part of the modern parenting experience. It can be challenging to discern the quality of health information on social media, leaving parents open to incorrect information and misinformation. Although access to immediate social support is a welcomed feature of social media, receiving incorrect health information can have unwanted consequences for the child, family, health provider, and wider community. The upskilling of parental health literacy to navigate the unique health literacy challenges that social media brings, alongside the creation and delivery of accessible, evidence-based information in varying formats, is urgently required. The provision of this information is the responsibility of every level of the health system, not just the treating health care professional.
Keyphrases
  • health information
  • social media
  • healthcare
  • social support
  • mental health
  • depressive symptoms
  • palliative care
  • primary care
  • machine learning