J 2024

Health Anxiety in Adolescents : The Roles of Online Health Information Seeking and Parental Health Anxiety

ŠVESTKOVÁ, Adéla, Nikol KVARDOVÁ and David ŠMAHEL

Basic information

Original name

Health Anxiety in Adolescents : The Roles of Online Health Information Seeking and Parental Health Anxiety

Authors

ŠVESTKOVÁ, Adéla, Nikol KVARDOVÁ and David ŠMAHEL

Edition

Journal of Child and Family Studies, New York, Springer, 2024, 1062-1024

Other information

Language

English

Type of outcome

Article in a journal

Country of publisher

United States of America

Confidentiality degree

is not subject to a state or trade secret

References:

Organization

Fakulta sociálních studií – Repository – Repository

UT WoS

001091946700002

EID Scopus

2-s2.0-85173789731

Keywords in English

Adolescence; Health anxiety; Online health information seeking; Parent child relationship; eHealth literacy

Links

GX19-27828X, research and development project.
Changed: 30/4/2024 04:27, RNDr. Daniel Jakubík

Abstract

V originále

Health anxiety is a condition which can negatively impact the well-being of an individual through rumination or extreme safety measures. However, literature about the factors related to adolescent health anxiety is scarce. In this study, we explored factors potentially related to adolescent health anxiety. Using structural equation modeling, we analyzed data from 1530 Czech adolescents aged 13–18, recruited through quota sampling, and their caregivers (64% female). First, we focused on its transmission from caregiver to offspring and on the moderating effect of gender. Second, we studied the relationship between online health information seeking and adolescent health anxiety with eHealth literacy as a potential moderator. The responses partially supported our hypotheses. Adolescent health anxiety was positively related to the health anxiety of the caregiver. Disease information seeking was positively related to health anxiety, but we found no such effect for fitness information seeking. Finally, eHealth literacy did not moderate online health information seeking. Our results underline that the health anxiety of caregivers and their offspring are intertwined and should ideally be addressed together. Furthermore, we show that for adolescents, like adults, online disease information seeking can be related to health anxiety and should be considered.

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