With the average teen spending approximately nine hours a week on social
networking sites, the UCLA
School of Public Health has partnered with Health
Net of California to develop a health literacy training intervention
using social media to encourage adolescents ages 13 to 17 to utilize
their health care more effectively.
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For More Information
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Health Net, Inc. Newsroom UCLA
Newsroom
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The two-year project, funded by a $1.1 million grant from the Eunice
Kennedy Shriver National Institute of Child Health and Human Development
of the National
Institutes of Health, will use a randomized
controlled trial to test the effectiveness of two different
interventions – a Web-based social media intervention and a "usual care”
intervention – to improve preventive care and decrease emergency room
visits among adolescents.
"Over 90 percent of teens today use social networking sites, not just to
interact with their peers but also to get information about issues that
are important to them,” said Michael Prelip, a professor of community
health sciences at the UCLA School of Public Health and one of the
principal investigators of the project. "This intervention will provide
important clues about the effectiveness of social media in influencing
adolescents’ understanding of their health care rights, responsibilities
and benefits so that they can become good health care consumers.”
Health Net initially approached UCLA in 2007 to partner on the grant
opportunity, which was successfully awarded two years later.
"While 88 percent of teens have health insurance, they may have little
experience or skill using the current health care system effectively,”
said the project’s principal investigator, Deborah Glik, a UCLA
professor of community health sciences.
"One of our chief goals is establishing best practices for encouraging
teens to use their insurance and the health care system so they can
become knowledgeable health care consumers as they transition into
adulthood,” said Nancy Wongvipat Kalev, Health Net’s director of Health
Education and Cultural and Linguistic Services and one of the study’s
collaborators. "Health Net and the UCLA School of Public Health have a
shared goal of ensuring that everyone makes effective use of his or her
doctor’s services and that we both understand what motivates young
people to access care.”
In addition to Kalev, who holds a master’s degree in public health,
three other Health Net study collaborators are graduates of the UCLA
School of Public Health: Elaine Robinson-Frank, RN, MPH, director of
Quality Improvement; Sharon Nessim, DrPH, manager of Quality Improvement
Research and Analysis; and Hoa Su, MPH, manager of Health Education.
The two-wave longitudinal repeated measures study will engage 8,000
Medicaid (Medi-Cal)
and Healthy
Families beneficiaries whose health plan is Health Net of
California. Health Net provides health benefits to more than 150,000
adolescents through its Medicaid, Healthy Families, Healthy
Kids and Access
to Infants and Mothers insurance plans.
The study will assess the impact of various traditional and newer social
media interventions on utilization patterns, health literacy, preventive
health care interactions with primary care providers, adoption of
preventive health practices, health information-seeking, and attitudes
toward health care.
About Health Net
Health Net of California, a subsidiary of Health Net Inc., is one of the
largest health plans in the state. Together with Health Net Life
Insurance Company, it serves more than 2.2 million members statewide and
contracts with more than 56,000 physicians, 300-plus hospitals and
nearly 5,000 pharmacies, giving its members greater choice and more
convenient access to care. Its commercial HMO and POS, Medicare,
and Medicaid lines of business have received "excellent” accreditation
status from the National
Committee for Quality Assurance. For more information about Health
Net, visit its website at www.healthnet.com
About The UCLA School of Public Health
The
UCLA School of Public Health is dedicated to enhancing the public’s
health by conducting innovative research; training future leaders and
health professionals; translating research into policy and practice; and
serving local, national and international communities. For more
information, visit www.ph.ucla.edu.
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