Metropolitan areas used more Internet than non-metropolitan areas; indicating the importance of Internet Worldwide.
Español: En EE.UU, las grandes ciudades usaron mas la Internet que las ciudades pequeñas y el medio rural. Imagínense ustedes en los países subdesarrollados donde la cobertura es deficiente aun en las grandes ciudades o capitales. Sin Internet no se puede ejercer la Medicina.
Carlos E Mijares, MD is a former resident and fellow in Allergy / Immunology, pediatrics in the USA,
University of Kansas, School of Medicine. USA.
QuickStats: Percentage* of U.S. Adults Who Looked up Health Information on the Internet in the Past Year,† by Type of Locality§ — National Health Interview Survey, 2012–2014¶
Weekly
December 18, 2015 / 64(49);1367
* With 95% confidence intervals.
† Based
on sample adult's response to a question asking if, during the past 12
months, the person ever used computers to look up health information on
the Internet. Responses were not limited to those who indicated that
they had Internet access.
§
Counties were classified into urbanization levels based on a
classification scheme developed by the National Center for Health
Statistics, CDC, that considers metropolitan/nonmetropolitan status,
population, and other factors.
¶
Estimates are based on household interviews of a sample of the civilian,
noninstitutionalized U.S. population and are derived from the National
Health Interview Survey sample adult questionnaire.
During 2012–2014, the percentage of adults
aged ≥18 years who reported looking up health information on the
Internet during the previous 12 months was lower among those residing in
nonmetropolitan counties (33.7%–38.9%) than among those residing in
metropolitan counties (44.3%–49.0%). The percentage was lowest among
adult residents of rural counties (33.7%) and highest among adult
residents of large fringe metropolitan counties (49.0%). Adult residents
of large central, medium, and small metropolitan counties reported
similar usage (44.3%–45.5%).
Sources: National Health Interview Survey. Available at http://www.cdc.gov/nchs/nhis.htm.
Ingram DD, Franco SJ. NCHS urban-rural classification scheme for
counties. National Center for Health Statistics. Vital Health Stat
2012;2(154).
Reported by: Deborah D. Ingram, PhD, ddingram@cdc.gov, 301-458-4733; Shilpa Bengeri.
Alternate Text: The figure above is a bar
chart showing that during 2012-2014, the percentage of adults aged ≥18
years who reported looking up health information on the Internet during
the previous 12 months was lower among those residing in nonmetropolitan
counties (33.7%-38.9%) than among those residing in metropolitan
counties (44.3%-49.0%). The percentage was lowest among adult residents
of rural counties (33.7%) and highest among adult residents of large
fringe metropolitan counties (49.0%). Adult residents of large central,
medium, and small metropolitan counties reported similar usage
(44.3%-45.5%).
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- Page last reviewed: December 18, 2015
- Page last updated: December 18, 2015
- Content source: Centers for Disease Control and Prevention
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