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Smart Device Ownership and Use of Social Media, Wearable Trackers, and Health Apps Among Black Women With Hypertension in the United States: National Survey Study

Smart Device Ownership and Use of Social Media, Wearable Trackers, and Health Apps Among Black Women With Hypertension in the United States: National Survey Study

Details on HINTS methodology are available on the web [5]. Briefly, civilian, noninstitutionalized adults living in the United States were sampled using a 2-stage design and completed a web-based or mail survey. Participants reported their sex assigned at birth. Participants were asked to describe their race, and those who selected “Black or African American” (with or without other races) were included.

Jolaade Kalinowski, Sandesh Bhusal, Sherry L Pagoto, Robert Newton Jr, Molly E Waring

JMIR Cardio 2024;8:e59243

Using the H2O Automatic Machine Learning Algorithms to Identify Predictors of Web-Based Medical Record Nonuse Among Patients in a Data-Rich Environment: Mixed Methods Study

Using the H2O Automatic Machine Learning Algorithms to Identify Predictors of Web-Based Medical Record Nonuse Among Patients in a Data-Rich Environment: Mixed Methods Study

Data for this study were collected from the National Cancer Institute 2019 to 2020 HINTS. The HINTS regularly collects nationally representative data about the American public’s knowledge of, attitudes toward, and use of cancer- and health-related information; therefore, this study is based on the relevant background in the United States. We used almost all the questions in the questionnaire as possible predictors, thus avoiding the subjectivity of manual screening.

Yang Chen, Xuejiao Liu, Lei Gao, Miao Zhu, Ben-Chang Shia, Mingchih Chen, Linglong Ye, Lei Qin

JMIR Med Inform 2023;11:e41576

Patterns of Use and Key Predictors for the Use of Wearable Health Care Devices by US Adults: Insights from a National Survey

Patterns of Use and Key Predictors for the Use of Wearable Health Care Devices by US Adults: Insights from a National Survey

The dataset for this study comes from the National Cancer Institute’s Health Information National Trends Survey (HINTS)-5, Cycle 3, with data collected from January 2019 to April 2019 through self-administered mailed questionnaires and a web-based pilot. HINTS is a nationally representative survey that includes US adults ≥18 years of age in civilian, noninstitutionalized settings.

Ranganathan Chandrasekaran, Vipanchi Katthula, Evangelos Moustakas

J Med Internet Res 2020;22(10):e22443

Variations in Unmet Health Care Needs by Perceptions of Social Media Health Mis- and Disinformation, Frequency of Social Media Use, Medical Trust, and Medical Care Discrimination: Cross-Sectional Study

Variations in Unmet Health Care Needs by Perceptions of Social Media Health Mis- and Disinformation, Frequency of Social Media Use, Medical Trust, and Medical Care Discrimination: Cross-Sectional Study

This cross-sectional study analyzed nationally representative data from the Health Information National Trends Survey 6 (HINTS 6), which periodically surveys noninstitutionalized adults in the United States about information seeking, health communication, as well as cancer prevention attitudes and behaviors. The most recent version of the data, HINTS 6, were collected through mail- and web-based surveys from March to November 2022 with a response rate of 28.1% (34,827,468/124,058,843) [51].

Jim P Stimpson, Sungchul Park, Fernando A Wilson, Alexander N Ortega

JMIR Public Health Surveill 2024;10:e56881

Associations of Wearable Activity Tracker Use With Physical Activity and Health Outcomes in Patients With Cancer: Findings from a Population-Based Survey Study

Associations of Wearable Activity Tracker Use With Physical Activity and Health Outcomes in Patients With Cancer: Findings from a Population-Based Survey Study

We analyzed the Health Information National Trends Survey–Surveillance, Epidemiology, and End Results (HINTS-SEER) dataset. The Health Information National Trends Survey (HINTS) is a nationally representative survey that examined the knowledge, attitudes, and usage of cancer- and health-related information by American adults [14].

Weijiao Zhou, Shaomei Shang, Youmin Cho

J Med Internet Res 2024;26:e51291

Consumption of Health-Related Videos and Human Papillomavirus Awareness: Cross-Sectional Analyses of a US National Survey and YouTube From the Urban-Rural Context

Consumption of Health-Related Videos and Human Papillomavirus Awareness: Cross-Sectional Analyses of a US National Survey and YouTube From the Urban-Rural Context

This study used the 2022 HINTS 6 data (administered between March and November 2022) to derive the latest and most up-to-date estimates [22]. The 2017 HINTS 5 was used to compute the change in prevalence only. The survey represents a nationally representative sample, and it is conducted by the US National Cancer Institutes (NCI) to monitor changes in the rapidly evolving fields of health communication and health information technology.

Ashvita Garg, Alan G Nyitray, James R Roberts, Nicholas Shungu, Kenneth J Ruggiero, Jessica Chandler, Haluk Damgacioglu, Yenan Zhu, Naomi C Brownstein, Katherine R Sterba, Ashish A Deshmukh, Kalyani Sonawane

J Med Internet Res 2024;26:e49749

Health Information National Trends Survey in American Sign Language (HINTS-ASL): Protocol for the Cultural Adaptation and Linguistic Validation of a National Survey

Health Information National Trends Survey in American Sign Language (HINTS-ASL): Protocol for the Cultural Adaptation and Linguistic Validation of a National Survey

The Health Information National Trends Survey (HINTS) is a survey of people’s health information seeking behaviors, including technology mediated sources. HINTS has previously been used for baseline data/endpoints in health communication studies and as outcome measures in several human-computer interaction studies [1]. Instruments are available in English and Spanish [2].

Poorna Kushalnagar, Raychelle Harris, Raylene Paludneviciene, TraciAnn Hoglind

JMIR Res Protoc 2017;6(9):e172

Prevalence and Age-Related Patterns in Health Information–Seeking Behaviors and Technology Use Among Skin Cancer Survivors: Survey Study

Prevalence and Age-Related Patterns in Health Information–Seeking Behaviors and Technology Use Among Skin Cancer Survivors: Survey Study

Data for this study were obtained from the 2019 Health Information National Trends Survey (HINTS) 5, Cycle 3 [29], which is a nationally representative survey of civilian, noninstitutionalized US adults 18 years or older that was administered by the National Cancer Institute. A detailed description of survey methodology has been published [29].

Michael Armando Marchetti, Liliane Sar-Graycar, Stephen W Dusza, Japbani K Nanda, Nicholas Kurtansky, Veronica M Rotemberg, Jennifer L Hay

JMIR Dermatol 2022;5(2):e36256

Prevalence, Factors, and Association of Electronic Communication Use With Patient-Perceived Quality of Care From the 2019 Health Information National Trends Survey 5-Cycle 3: Exploratory Study

Prevalence, Factors, and Association of Electronic Communication Use With Patient-Perceived Quality of Care From the 2019 Health Information National Trends Survey 5-Cycle 3: Exploratory Study

Data used in this study were from the HINTS 5-Cycle 3 [28]. HINTS is a nationally representative survey designed to understand American adults’ knowledge of, attitudes toward, and use of cancer- and health-related information [29]. HINTS 5-Cycle 3 used a single-mode mail survey, with a 2-stage sample design, including a stratified sample of addresses and a selected adult within each sampled household [28].

Rumei Yang, Kai Zeng, Yun Jiang

J Med Internet Res 2022;24(2):e27167

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