• Pediatrics · Oct 2011

    Internet-based developmental screening: a digital divide between English- and Spanish-speaking parents.

    • Simon J Hambidge, Stephanie Phibbs, Arne Beck, and David Aaron Bergman.
    • Department of Community Health Services, Denver Health, Denver, Colorado 80204, USA. simon.hambidge@dhha.org
    • Pediatrics. 2011 Oct 1; 128 (4): e939-46.

    BackgroundInternet-based developmental screening is being implemented in pediatric practices across the United States. Little is known about the application of this technology in poor urban populations.ObjectiveWe describe here the results of focus groups, surveys, and in-depth interviews during home visits with families served by an urban safety-net organization to address the question of whether it is possible to use Internet or e-mail communication for medical previsit engagement in a population that is majority Hispanic, of low socioeconomic status, and has many non-English-speaking families.MethodsThis study included families in 4 clinics within a safety-net health care system. The study design included the use of (1) parental surveys (n = 200) of a convenience sample of parents whose children received primary care in the clinics, (2) focus groups (n = 7 groups) with parents, and (3) in-depth interviews during home visits with 4 families. We used χ(2) and multivariate analyses to compare Internet access in English- and Spanish-speaking families. Standard qualitative methods were used to code focus-group texts and identify convergent themes.ResultsIn multivariate analysis, independent factors associated with computer use were English versus Spanish language (odds ratio: 3.2 [95% confidence interval: 1.4-6.9]) and education through at least high school (odds ratio: 4.7 [95% confidence interval: 2.3-9.7]). In focus groups, the concept of parental previsit work, such as developmental screening tests, was viewed favorably by all groups. However, many parents expressed reservations about doing this work by using the Internet or e-mail and stated a preference for either paper or telephone options. Many Spanish-speaking families discussed lack of access to computers and printers.ConclusionsIn this economically disadvantaged population, language and maternal education were associated with access to the Internet. Given the potential power of previsit work to tailor well-child visits to the needs of individual families, alternative strategies to using the Internet should be explored for populations without reliable Internet access.

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