@Article{info:doi/10.2196/69611, author="He, Aaron Wan Jia and Yuan, Runqi and Luk, Tzu Tsun and Wang, Kelvin Man Ping and Chan, Sophia Siu Chee", title="Boosting Digital Health Engagement Among Older Adults in Hong Kong: Pilot Pre-Post Study of the Generations Connect Project", journal="JMIR Form Res", year="2025", month="May", day="8", volume="9", pages="e69611", keywords="older adults; eHealth literacy; home-based intervention; intergenerational learning; health promotion", abstract="Background: Older adults' utilization of digital health care remains low despite a high demand for regular health services. Easily accessible eHealth interventions designed for older adults are needed. Objective: This study aimed to examine the feasibility and effectiveness of an intergenerational, home-based eHealth literacy intervention package on older adults in Hong Kong. Methods: In this study, 101 older adults (n=64, 63.4{\%} female) with a median age of 80 (IQR 77-85) years received an intergenerational, home-based eHealth literacy intervention package, delivered by trained university student interventionists. The intervention (median 60, IQR 40.8-70 minutes) included personalized guidance on using mobile health apps, QR code scanners and instant messaging, and access to online health information, along with recommendations for physical and mental well-being. Following the intervention, a daily health-coaching message was sent to older adults via WhatsApp for 14 days. eHealth literacy, health, and lifestyle were assessed at baseline and at a 2-week follow-up using paired t tests. Results: Retention rate for the 2-week follow-up was 70.3{\%} (71/101). Compared to baseline, eHealth literacy scores increased by 2.39 points (P=.11; Cohen d=0.20), and daily smartphone use rose by 0.45 hours (P=.07; Cohen d=0.05). Participants self-reported increased physical activity (50/71, 70{\%}), more frequent viewing of health videos (43/70, 61{\%}), and improved handwashing practices (39/71, 55{\%}). The intervention achieved a high satisfaction rating of 4.32 out of 5. Conclusions: The intergenerational, home-based eHealth literacy intervention package was feasible and acceptable, showing promise for increasing older adults' engagement with digital health care resources and promoting healthy behaviors. Future studies should explore longer-term effects and ways to further improve the intervention. ", issn="2561-326X", doi="10.2196/69611", url="https://formative.jmir.org/2025/1/e69611", url="https://doi.org/10.2196/69611" }