Papadakos Janet, Barnsley Jan, Berta Whitney, Rowlands Gillian, Samoil Diana, Howell Doris
Cancer Health Literacy Research Centre, Cancer Education, Princess Margaret Hospital Cancer Centre, 585 University Avenue, ELLICSR PMB B-130, Toronto, ON, M5G 2N2, Canada.
Patient Education, Cancer Care Ontario, Toronto, Canada.
Support Care Cancer. 2022 Jan;30(1):603-613. doi: 10.1007/s00520-021-06466-5. Epub 2021 Aug 4.
Increasing demands on Canada's healthcare system require patients to take on more active roles in their health. Effective self-management has been linked to improved health outcomes; and there is evidence that effective behaviors, and subsequent healthcare utilization, are linked to self-efficacy and health literacy; however, this link has had minimal testing in the cancer context. Our aim is to examine the association between self-efficacy, health literacy, chemotherapy self-management behaviors, and health service utilization.
A cross-sectional survey that included validated measures of self-efficacy, health literacy, chemotherapy self-management, and health service utilization was completed by participants (N = 213). Multivariable modeling using hierarchical linear regression was used to examine the association between variables.
Self-efficacy contributed significantly to explaining variation in chemotherapy self-management score. Health literacy was not significantly associated with any of the dependent variables.
Participants with higher self-efficacy had higher chemotherapy self-management scores compared to participants with low self-efficacy. Contrary to evidence in the chronic disease self-management literature, this study demonstrated that health literacy was not associated with chemotherapy self-management behavior nor was it associated with self-efficacy. Building patient self-efficacy in the context of chemotherapy self-management could be particularly helpful both in the cancer center and in the domain of oral chemotherapy management at home where patients are required to take on significant responsibility for self-management.
加拿大医疗保健系统面临的需求不断增加,这要求患者在自身健康方面发挥更积极的作用。有效的自我管理与改善健康结果相关;有证据表明,有效的行为以及随后的医疗保健利用与自我效能感和健康素养相关;然而,这种联系在癌症背景下的测试很少。我们的目的是研究自我效能感、健康素养、化疗自我管理行为和医疗服务利用之间的关联。
参与者(N = 213)完成了一项横断面调查,其中包括自我效能感、健康素养、化疗自我管理和医疗服务利用的有效测量指标。使用分层线性回归的多变量建模来研究变量之间的关联。
自我效能感对解释化疗自我管理得分的差异有显著贡献。健康素养与任何一个因变量均无显著关联。
与自我效能感低的参与者相比,自我效能感高的参与者化疗自我管理得分更高。与慢性病自我管理文献中的证据相反,本研究表明,健康素养与化疗自我管理行为无关,也与自我效能感无关。在化疗自我管理背景下增强患者的自我效能感,在癌症中心以及患者需要承担重大自我管理责任的家庭口服化疗管理领域可能特别有帮助。