Association Between Social Media Use and Cancer Screening Awareness and Behavior for People Without a Cancer Diagnosis: Matched Cohort Study
Journal of Medical Internet Research2021Vol. 23(8), pp. e26395–e26395
Citations Over TimeTop 12% of 2021 papers
Lei Qin, Xiaomei Zhang, Anlin Wu, James S. Miser, Yen‐Lin Liu, Jason C. Hsu, Ben‐Chang Shia, Linglong Ye
Abstract
While social media services can potentially promote cancer screening awareness in the general population, but they did not improve screening behavior after adjusting for socioeconomic status. These findings strengthened our understanding of social media use in targeting health communications for different cancers.
Related Papers
- → How sources of health information relate to knowledge and use of cancer screening exams(1992)144 cited
- → Modeling the Mediating and Moderating Roles of Risk Perceptions, Efficacy, Desired Uncertainty, and Worry in Information Seeking-Cancer Screening Relationship Using HINTS 2017 Data(2021)21 cited
- → Knowledge and values for cancer screening decisions: Results from a national survey(2015)15 cited
- → The Relationship Between Technology Use and Colon Cancer Screening(2020)
- → Health Disparity in Effective Cervical Cancer Screening: Findings from a National Survey of U.S.(2021)