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Articles

Ethnic Differences in Health Information Seeking Behavior: A Test and the Extension of the Social Diversification Hypothesis

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Pages 115-132 | Received 05 Aug 2020, Accepted 06 Mar 2021, Published online: 16 Jun 2021
 

Abstract

This study examined ethnic differences in health information seeking behavior in Israel through the lens of the social diversification hypothesis, while viewing the ethnic minority population as a heterogeneous group in accordance with the size of the localities they reside in. The study contended that Arabs residing in small localities have a limited access to advanced health services and health information. Therefore, they were assumed to be more likely than other ethnic groups to engage in health information seeking behavior. The data for the study was retrieved from the 2017 Israel Social Survey. Using the logistic and the multinomial regression analyses, the study found that Arabs residing in small localities were more likely than other ethnic groups to search for information on three (as opposed to a lower number) of the health-related topics studied (diseases, disease prevention, and rights in the health system) and specifically—for information on disease prevention, thus supporting the extended social diversification hypothesis. However, they were found being less likely than other ethnic groups to engage in health information seeking in general and online, and to seek the information regarding the rights in health system in particular. These results justify the view of ethnic minorities residing in localities of various sizes as unequally disadvantaged in terms of healthcare and signal a major need to improve the provision of health information to members of ethnic minorities who reside in small localities.

Acknowledgements

Thanks is provided to Mrs. Donna Bossin for a proof reading of the article.

Disclosure statement

The author declares that he has no conflict of interest.

Data availability statement

The data for the current research has been received upon request from the Israel Social Science Data Center (ISDC) at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem. The appropriate reference to the database appears inside the manuscript.

Additional information

Notes on contributors

Dennis Rosenberg

Dennis Rosenberg, PhD, is a postdoctoral fellow at the University of Haifa, School of Public Health. His research fields are: gender and ethnicity in health-related Internet/social media use, ethnicity and e-government use, media consumption in later life, ethnic minority - state relations, immigration, and (medical) cannabis use.

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