Gustafsdottir Sonja S, Sigurdardottir Arun K, Mårtensson Lena, Arnadottir Solveig A
School of Health Sciences, University of Akureyri, Solborg v/Nordurslod, 600, Akureyri, Iceland.
Akureyri Hospital, Akureyri, Iceland.
BMC Public Health. 2022 Mar 16;22(1):511. doi: 10.1186/s12889-022-12935-1.
Older people have been identified as having lower health literacy (HL) than the general population average. Living in sparsely populated Arctic regions involves unique health challenges that may influence HL. The research aim was to explore the level of HL, its problematic dimensions, and its association with the selection of contextual factors among older adults living in sparsely populated areas in Northern Iceland.
This was a cross-sectional study based on a stratified random sample from the national register of one urban town and two rural areas. The study included 175 participants (57.9% participation rate) who were community-dwelling (40% rural) and aged 65-92 years (M 74.2 ± SD 6.3), 43% of whom were women. Data were collected in 2017-2018 via face-to-face interviews, which included the standardised European Health Literacy Survey Questionnaire-short version (HLS-EU-Q16) with a score range from 0 to 16 (low-high HL).
The level of HL ranged from 6-16 (M 13.25, SD ± 2.41) with 65% having sufficient HL (score 13-16), 31.3% problematic HL (score 9-12) and 3.7% inadequate HL (score 0-8). Most problematic dimension of HL was within the domains of disease prevention and health promotion related to information in the media. Univariate linear regression revealed that better HL was associated with more education (p=0.001), more resiliency (p=0.001), driving a car (p=0.006), good access to health care- (p=0.005) and medical service (p=0.027), younger age (p=0.005), adequate income (p=0.044) and less depression (p=0.006). Multivariable analysis showed that more education (p=0.014) and driving a car (p=0.017) were independent predictors of better HL.
Difficulties in HL concern information in the media. HL was strongly associated with education and driving a car however, not with urban-rural residency. Mobility and access should be considered for improving HL of older people.
已确定老年人的健康素养(HL)低于一般人群平均水平。生活在人口稀少的北极地区面临着可能影响健康素养的独特健康挑战。本研究的目的是探讨冰岛北部人口稀少地区老年人的健康素养水平、存在问题的维度及其与所选背景因素之间的关联。
这是一项横断面研究,基于从一个城镇和两个农村地区的国家登记册中分层随机抽取的样本。该研究纳入了175名参与者(参与率为57.9%),他们居住在社区(40%为农村),年龄在65 - 92岁之间(平均年龄74.2±标准差6.3),其中43%为女性。2017 - 2018年通过面对面访谈收集数据,访谈内容包括标准化的欧洲健康素养调查问卷简版(HLS - EU - Q16),得分范围为0至16分(健康素养从低到高)。
健康素养水平在6 - 16分之间(平均13.25分,标准差±2.41),65%的人具备足够的健康素养(得分13 - 16分),31.3%的人存在问题性健康素养(得分9 - 12分),3.7%的人健康素养不足(得分0 - 8分)。健康素养最成问题的维度在于与媒体信息相关的疾病预防和健康促进领域。单变量线性回归显示,更好的健康素养与更多教育(p = 0.001)、更强的适应能力(p = 0.001)、开车(p = 0.006)、获得良好的医疗保健(p = 0.005)和医疗服务(p = 0.027)、更年轻的年龄(p = 0.005)、足够的收入(p = 0.044)以及更少的抑郁(p = 0.006)相关。多变量分析表明,更多教育(p = 0.014)和开车(p = 0.017)是更好的健康素养的独立预测因素。
健康素养方面的困难涉及媒体信息。健康素养与教育和开车密切相关,然而与城乡居住情况无关。为提高老年人的健康素养,应考虑其流动性和可及性。