Stormacq Coraline, Van den Broucke Stephan, Wosinski Jacqueline
Faculty of Public Health, Catholic University of Louvain, Clos Chapelle-aux-Champs 30, B-1200 Bruxelles, Belgium.
Institut et Haute Ecole de Santé La Source, HES-SO, University of Applied Sciences and Arts Western Switzerland, Avenue Vinet 30, CH-1004 Lausanne, Switzerland.
Health Promot Int. 2019 Oct 1;34(5):e1-e17. doi: 10.1093/heapro/day062.
While socioeconomic disparities are among the most fundamental causes of health disparities, socioeconomic status (SES) does not impact health directly. One of the potential mediating factors that link SES and health is health literacy (HL). Yet although HL can be considered a modifiable risk factor of socioeconomic disparities in health, the relationship between SES, HL and health disparities is not well understood. This study reviewed the evidence regarding the mediating role of HL in the relationship between socioeconomic and health disparities. Medline, Cinahl, Embase, PsychInfo, Eric, Web of Science, Google, Google Scholar, Mednar, Doaj and Worldcat were used to retrieve studies that specifically addressed socioeconomic and socio-demographic factors related to low HL levels, as well as the mediating role of HL in the relationship between SES and disparities in health outcomes. Selected studies were assessed for methodological quality. Sixteen published studies were retained for inclusion and content analyzed using the constant comparison method. The review indicates that disadvantaged social and socioeconomic conditions contribute to low HL levels, whereby low SES, and particularly educational attainment, is the most important determinant of HL, and that HL mediates the relationship between SES and health status, quality of life, specific health-related outcomes, health behaviors and use of preventive services. HL can be considered as a modifiable risk factor of socioeconomic disparities in health. Enhancing the level of HL in the population or making health services more accessible to people with low HL may be a means to reach a greater equity in health.
虽然社会经济差异是健康差异的最根本原因之一,但社会经济地位(SES)并不直接影响健康。连接SES和健康的潜在中介因素之一是健康素养(HL)。然而,尽管HL可被视为健康方面社会经济差异的一个可改变的风险因素,但SES、HL与健康差异之间的关系尚未得到充分理解。本研究回顾了有关HL在社会经济与健康差异关系中中介作用的证据。使用Medline、Cinahl、Embase、PsychInfo、Eric、科学网、谷歌、谷歌学术、Mednar、Doaj和Worldcat检索专门探讨与低HL水平相关的社会经济和社会人口因素,以及HL在SES与健康结果差异关系中的中介作用的研究。对所选研究进行方法学质量评估。保留16项已发表的研究纳入,并使用持续比较法进行内容分析。该综述表明,不利的社会和社会经济状况导致低HL水平,其中低SES,尤其是教育程度,是HL的最重要决定因素,并且HL介导了SES与健康状况、生活质量、特定健康相关结果、健康行为和预防服务使用之间的关系。HL可被视为健康方面社会经济差异的一个可改变的风险因素。提高人群的HL水平或使低HL人群更容易获得医疗服务可能是实现更大健康公平的一种手段。