RMIT Europe has contributed to a European project aimed at empowering citizens to live a healthy and active lifestyle.
The Improving Digital Empowerment for Active Healthy Living (IDEAHL) project, which has just finished, developed a digital health strategy to promote digital technologies and guide citizens in how to use them.
was one of 14 partners involved in the project, which was funded by the European Union and coordinated by the Regional Ministry of Health of Asturias, Spain.
Developing the European Digital Health Literacy Strategy
RMIT helped develop the European Digital Health Literacy Strategy, a framework providing comprehensive guidelines to improve digital health literacy in Europe and beyond.
The strategy focused on areas like health promotion, disease prevention and quality-of-life monitoring.
RMIT Europe health researcher Dr Gabriela Irrazábal said it was also about addressing inequities, such as through geographic, gender, socio-cultural and economic determinants.
“Everyone deserves to be healthy but without clear guidelines for decision makers, it’s difficult to forge a path towards a just outcome,” she said.
“Across several European countries and Australia, we worked together to create guidelines towards ensuring citizens know how to manage their own health outcomes.”
Creating an inclusive digital health literacy strategy also involved considerations for including how digital tools can effectively be used in treatment.
“But there’s no point advocating for digital solutions if people don’t know how to use them,” Irrazabal said.
“We first need to know how literate people are when it comes to healthcare and digital tools.
“Then we can promote higher levels of digital literacy for health via the interventions developed in the strategy.”
Led by the Regional Ministry of Health of Asturias, the strategy was a collaborative effort that culminated in it being presented during the project’s final conference at the European Parliament earlier this year.
Making it easier to map and track health and digital literacy
The RMIT team lead the development of one of the first online tools displaying interactive data visualising levels of health literacy and digital health literacy.
The was co-designed with experts, academics, patient associations’ representatives and policy makers to help time-poor researchers quickly and accurately access evidence-based studies sorted by country.
“We included complex data health literacy studies into an easy-to-use atlas to promote policy making in this area,” Irrazabal said.
“With a better understanding of these literacy levels, work to improve them can be better targeted towards the often-marginalised groups who need it most.”
Researchers at RMIT worked with geospatial mapping company dMap to consolidate and visualise the complex data in an easy-to-access interactive map, with raw data download capability and a best practice and policy resource list.
It was an effort spearheaded by digital health expert Professor Kerryn Butler-Henderson, now an adjunct professor in RMIT’s and Head of School at Charles Sturt University.
The World Health Organisation sees improving health literacy as a crucial step in realising the UN 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development, aimed at ending poverty in all its forms.