Hargiss John Blade, St Jeor Jeffery D, Horn Jennifer L, Garrison Gregory M
Mayo Clinic Alix School of Medicine, Rochester, MN, USA.
Mayo Clinic, Rochester, MN, USA.
J Prim Care Community Health. 2021 Jan-Dec;12:21501327211037773. doi: 10.1177/21501327211037773.
Health literacy is an individual's capacity to obtain, process, and understand basic health information needed to make appropriate health decisions. Failure to understand and correctly execute a plan of care often leads to poor health outcomes. Determining patient health literacy allows health care providers to tailor their plan of care instructions, increasing the probability of understanding, and adherence. Several validated health literacy tests have been developed to assess the health literacy of individuals and ethnic groups. However, because a proctor is required to administer these tests, their usefulness in clinical settings is limited. The issue of health literacy is especially relevant within minority groups. This research focused on producing a translatable assessment that can be administered quickly without a proctor.
We developed a 15-question instrument (the RIHLA) in English using the Delphi method with a panel of bilingual experts and translated it into Spanish. Internal reliability was assessed using Cronbach's alpha for 3 groups: Native English-speaking College students (NESC), Native English-speaking patients (NES), and Limited English Proficient Spanish-speaking patients (LEP). External validity was assessed using Pearson's correlation coefficient to compare our instrument to a previously validated, proctored instrument measuring health literacy (the SAHL-E).
Four hundred fifteen subjects completed the RIHLA. Of these, 192 (46.3%) were NESC, 208 (50.1%) were NES, and 15 (3.6%) were LEP. The mean number of correct answers was 11.2, 11.6, and 8.3 respectively with the LEP group scoring lower ( < .01). Cronbach's alpha was >.70 for each group. Moderate correlation between the RIHLA and the previously validated instrument was present ( < .01) with Pearson's = .47 (95% CI: 0.18-0.69).
The RIHLA is a non-proctored assessment tool that may provide a measure of patients' health literacy in multiple languages. Further studies with larger sample sizes are necessary to confirm the reliability, validity, and generalizability to a wider population.
健康素养是个人获取、处理和理解做出适当健康决策所需基本健康信息的能力。无法理解和正确执行护理计划往往会导致不良的健康结果。确定患者的健康素养能使医疗保健提供者调整其护理计划说明,提高理解和依从的可能性。已经开发了几种经过验证的健康素养测试来评估个人和族裔群体的健康素养。然而,由于需要监考人员来进行这些测试,它们在临床环境中的实用性有限。健康素养问题在少数群体中尤为重要。本研究的重点是制作一种无需监考人员即可快速进行的可翻译评估工具。
我们使用德尔菲法与一组双语专家共同开发了一份包含15个问题的英文问卷(RIHLA),并将其翻译成西班牙语。使用克朗巴哈系数对三组人群评估内部信度:以英语为母语的大学生(NESC)、以英语为母语的患者(NES)以及英语水平有限的讲西班牙语的患者(LEP)。使用皮尔逊相关系数评估外部效度,将我们的问卷与之前经过验证的、有监考的健康素养测量问卷(SAHL-E)进行比较。
415名受试者完成了RIHLA问卷。其中,192人(46.3%)是NESC,208人(50.1%)是NES,15人(3.6%)是LEP。正确答案的平均数分别为11.2、11.6和8.3,LEP组得分较低(<0.01)。每组的克朗巴哈系数均大于0.70。RIHLA与之前经过验证的问卷之间存在中度相关性(<0.01),皮尔逊相关系数为0.47(95%CI:0.18 - 0.69)。
RIHLA是一种无需监考的评估工具,可提供多种语言的患者健康素养测量方法。需要进一步进行更大样本量的研究,以确认其在更广泛人群中的可靠性、有效性和普遍性。