Boonstra Marco D, Reijneveld Sijmen A, Foitzik Elisabeth M, Westerhuis Ralf, Navis Gerjan, de Winter Andrea F
Department of Health Sciences, University Medical Center Groningen, University of Groningen, Groningen,The Netherlands.
Institute for Applied Health Sciences, Coburg University of Applied Sciences and Arts, Coburg,Germany.
Nephrol Dial Transplant. 2020 Dec 22;36(7):1207-21. doi: 10.1093/ndt/gfaa273.
Limited health literacy (LHL) is associated with multiple adverse health outcomes in chronic kidney disease (CKD). Interventions are needed to improve this situation, but evidence on intervention targets and strategies is lacking. This systematic review aims to identify potential targets and strategies by summarizing the evidence on: (i) patient- and system-level factors potentially mediating the relation between LHL and health outcomes; and (ii) the effectiveness of health literacy interventions customized to CKD patients.
We performed a systematic review of peer-reviewed research articles in Medline, Embase and Web of Science, 2009-19. We assessed the quality of the studies and conducted a best-evidence synthesis.
We identified 860 publications and included 48 studies. Most studies were of low quality (n = 26) and focused on dialysis and transplantation (n = 38). We found strong evidence for an association of LHL with smoking and having a suboptimal transplantation process. Evidence was weak for associations between LHL and a variety of factors related to self-care management (n = 25), utilization of care (n = 23), patient-provider interaction (n = 8) and social context (n = 5). Six interventions were aimed at improving knowledge, decision-making and health behaviours, but evidence for their effectiveness was weak.
Study heterogeneity, low quality and focus on kidney failure largely impede the identification of intervention targets and strategies for LHL. More and higher quality studies in earlier CKD stages are needed to unravel how LHL leads to worse health outcomes, and to identify targets and strategies to prevent disease deterioration. Healthcare organizations need to develop and evaluate efforts to support LHL patients.
健康素养有限(LHL)与慢性肾脏病(CKD)的多种不良健康结局相关。需要采取干预措施来改善这种情况,但缺乏关于干预目标和策略的证据。本系统评价旨在通过总结以下方面的证据来确定潜在的目标和策略:(i)可能介导LHL与健康结局之间关系的患者层面和系统层面因素;(ii)针对CKD患者定制的健康素养干预措施的有效性。
我们对2009年至2019年发表在Medline、Embase和科学网数据库中经同行评审的研究文章进行了系统评价。我们评估了研究的质量并进行了最佳证据综合分析。
我们共检索到860篇出版物,纳入了48项研究。大多数研究质量较低(n = 26),且聚焦于透析和移植(n = 38)。我们发现有强有力的证据表明LHL与吸烟以及移植过程不理想有关。LHL与各种与自我护理管理相关因素(n = 25)、医疗服务利用(n = 23)、医患互动(n = 8)和社会环境(n = 5)之间关联的证据较弱。有六项干预措施旨在提高知识、决策能力和健康行为,但关于其有效性的证据较弱。
研究的异质性、低质量以及对肾衰竭的关注在很大程度上阻碍了对LHL干预目标和策略的确定。需要在CKD早期阶段开展更多高质量研究,以阐明LHL如何导致更差的健康结局,并确定预防疾病恶化的目标和策略。医疗保健机构需要制定并评估支持LHL患者的措施。