Rush Alzheimer's Disease Center, Rush University Medical Center, Chicago, IL, USA.
BMC Geriatr. 2012 Jun 12;12:30. doi: 10.1186/1471-2318-12-30.
Recent research has begun to recognize the important influence of literacy levels and how they affect health and wellbeing, especially in older adults. Our study focuses on health and financial literacy, two domains of literacy which previous research has suggested may be significantly related to health and wellbeing. Our study examines the relation of health and financial literacy with health promoting behaviors and health status among community-based older persons.
We conducted a cross-sectional study using data from the Rush Memory and Aging Project, a community-based cohort study of aging in northeastern Illinois. The study consisted of 556 older persons without dementia, each determined by a clinical evaluation. Health and financial literacy were measured using a series of questions designed to assess the ability to understand and process health and financial information, concepts, and numeracy; the two scores were averaged to yield a total literacy score. Health promoting behaviors, including engagement in cognitive, physical, and social activities, were assessed using self report measures. Indicators of heath status, including cognition (global cognition and five specific cognitive abilities), functional status (basic and instrumental activities of daily living, mobility disability), and mental health (depressive symptoms, loneliness) were assessed.
In a series of regression models adjusted for age, sex, and education, higher total literacy scores were associated with more frequent participation in health promoting behaviors, including cognitive, physical and social activities (all p values <0.05). Higher total literacy scores were associated with higher cognitive function, less disability, and better mental health (all p values < 0.05). Literacy remained associated with health promoting behaviors and health status in fully adjusted models that also controlled for income and the number of chronic medical conditions. Most of the findings were similar for health and financial literacy except that health literacy was more strongly associated with health promoting behaviors whereas financial literacy was more strongly associated with mental health.
Health and financial literacy are associated with more frequent engagement in health promoting behaviors and better health status in older persons without dementia.
最近的研究开始认识到文化水平的重要影响,以及它们如何影响健康和幸福感,尤其是在老年人中。我们的研究侧重于健康和金融知识,这两个知识领域之前的研究表明可能与健康和幸福感有显著关系。我们的研究考察了健康和金融知识与促进健康行为和社区老年人健康状况之间的关系。
我们使用来自伊利诺伊州东北部的社区为基础的老龄化的 Rush 记忆和衰老项目(Rush Memory and Aging Project)的数据进行了一项横断面研究。该研究包括 556 名没有痴呆症的老年人,每个人都通过临床评估确定。健康和金融知识使用一系列旨在评估理解和处理健康和金融信息、概念和计算能力的问题来衡量;两个分数的平均值产生一个总的文化水平分数。健康促进行为,包括参与认知、身体和社会活动,使用自我报告的措施进行评估。健康状况的指标,包括认知(总体认知和五个特定认知能力)、功能状态(基本和工具日常生活活动、移动障碍)和心理健康(抑郁症状、孤独感),也进行了评估。
在一系列调整了年龄、性别和教育程度的回归模型中,较高的总文化水平分数与更频繁地参与健康促进行为有关,包括认知、身体和社会活动(所有 p 值均<0.05)。较高的总文化水平分数与较高的认知功能、较少的残疾和更好的心理健康有关(所有 p 值均<0.05)。在完全调整的模型中,包括收入和慢性疾病数量,文化水平仍然与健康促进行为和健康状况有关。除了健康文化水平与健康促进行为的关系更强,而金融文化水平与心理健康的关系更强之外,大多数发现对于健康和金融文化水平都是相似的。
在没有痴呆症的老年人中,健康和金融知识与更频繁地参与健康促进行为和更好的健康状况有关。