Bahar Kefeli Col,1 Ayse Gumusler Basaran,2 Burcu Genc Kose2 1Güneysu School of Physical Therapy and Rehabilitation, Recep Tayyip Erdoan University, Rize, Türkiye; 2Faculty of Health Sciences, Recep Tayyip Erdoan University, Rize, TürkiyeCorrespondence: Bahar Kefeli Col, Email bahar.kefelicol@erdogan.edu.trIntroduction: While the Internet can be a valuable resource for learning about health issues, for those without adequate e-health literacy skills, it can have adverse effects on unwanted anxiety and cyberchondria risk. Improving e-health literacy is essential to manage health and death anxiety and help reduce the risk of cyberchondria. The aim of this study is to determine the e-health literacy, health anxiety, cyberchondria and death anxiety levels of university students, evaluate them in terms of independent variables and examine the relationship between the scales.Methods: The study was completed with 568 students receiving education in the health department of a university. Data were obtained using the e-Health Literacy Scale, Health Anxiety Inventory, Cyberchondria Severity Scale, and Death Anxiety Scale. The chi-square, MannâWhitney U, KruskalâWallis, Tamhaneâs T2 post hoc tests, and Spearman correlation were used to analyze the data.Results: The mean score of e-health literacy was 28.63± 4.65; health anxiety was 19.11± 8.37, cyberchondria was 86.30± 18.28 and death anxiety was 7.34± 2.14. Cyberchondria is low in women and those who do not conduct online research on health. E-health literacy was higher in those earning above the minimum wage. Health and death anxiety was low in men and in those who did not conduct online health-related research. Health anxiety was positively correlated with cyberchondria and death anxiety and negatively correlated with e-health literacy. There was a positive relationship between cyberchondria and E-health literacy and death anxiety. This study highlights the complex relationship between eHealth literacy, health anxiety, cyberchondria and death anxiety. It shows that low e-health literacy can increase health anxiety, which in turn can worsen cyberchondria and death anxiety. By emphasising the importance of e-health literacy in health education, the findings may help students manage their anxiety, make informed health decisions, and increase their professional competence.Keywords: E-health literacy, death anxiety, cyberchondria, health anxiety, university students
Col et al. (Mon,) studied this question.