Scientific article
OA Policy
English

Compulsive health-related internet use and cyberchondria

Published inEuropean addiction research, vol. 27, no. 1, p. 58-66
Publication date2021
First online date2020-10-29
Abstract

Background: Cyberchondria denotes excessive and repeated online health-related searches associated with an increase in health anxiety. Such searches persist in those with cyberchondria, despite the negative consequences, resembling a pattern of compulsive Internet use.

Objectives: The aim of the present study was to assess compulsive health-related Internet use in relation to cyberchondria while controlling for related variables.

Method: Adult participants (N = 749) were recruited from an online platform. They completed questionnaires assessing the severity of cyberchondria (via the Cyberchondria Severity Scale [CSS]), compulsive Internet use adapted for online health-related seeking (via the adapted Compulsive Internet Use Scale [CIUS]), and levels of intolerance of uncertainty and anxiety, as well as depressive, somatic, and obsessive-compulsive symptoms. A logistic regression analysis was carried out to identify predictors of scores above a cutoff value on the CIUS, indicating compulsive health-related Internet use.

Results: The regression output showed that only the CSS total score and sex made a unique, statistically significant contribution to the model, leading to the correct classification of 78.6% of the cases. Of the CSS subscales, compulsion and distress were the most strongly associated with compulsive health-related Internet use.

Conclusions: The finding that the adapted CIUS scores are associated with cyberchondria indicates that cyberchondria has a compulsive component, at least in terms of health-related Internet use. It also suggests that compulsive health-related Internet use persists despite the distress associated with this activity. Males may engage in cyberchondria more compulsively than females. These findings have implications for research and clinical practice.

Keywords
  • Compulsive Internet use
  • Cyberchondria
  • Health anxiety
  • Internet addiction
Citation (ISO format)
KHAZAAL, Yasser et al. Compulsive health-related internet use and cyberchondria. In: European addiction research, 2021, vol. 27, n° 1, p. 58–66. doi: 10.1159/000510922
Main files (1)
Article (Published version)
Identifiers
Additional URL for this publicationhttps://karger.com/EAR/article/doi/10.1159/000510922
Journal ISSN1022-6877
58views
118downloads

Technical informations

Creation11/07/2024 15:29:53
First validation26/09/2024 11:30:45
Update time18/10/2024 09:05:42
Status update26/09/2024 11:30:45
Last indexation29/10/2024 09:11:24
All rights reserved by Archive ouverte UNIGE and the University of GenevaunigeBlack