School of Nursing, The Johns Hopkins University, 525 N. Wolfe Street, Baltimore, MD, 21205, United States of America.
Bloomberg School of Public Health, The Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore, MD, United States of America.
BMC Public Health. 2024 Oct 23;24(1):2941. doi: 10.1186/s12889-024-20427-7.
Health literacy has been linked to positive attitudes toward COVID-19 preventive measures among adolescents and young- or middle-aged adult populations. This study examined the relationship between health literacy and attitudes toward COVID-19 preventive measures among non-English speaking Korean American older adults and their caregivers. The study additionally investigated how sociodemographic characteristics were associated with attitudes.
COVID-19 survey data was collected from potential participants for an ongoing randomized controlled trial involving both Korean American older adults and their caregivers in the Baltimore-Washington and the New York Metropolitan areas (ClinicalTrials.gov Identifier: NCT03909347). Korean American older adults with normal cognition and their caregivers were allowed to participate in the survey. We used latent profile analysis to find unique clusters of participants with a similar pattern of responses to attitudes toward COVID-19 preventive measures. Based on the analysis, we employed multinomial logistic regression to investigate how health literacy and sociodemographic characteristics were associated with the clusters.
We found three clusters based on participant responses to COVID-19 preventive measures-Positive, Negative, or Mixed. Health literacy was not associated with COVID-19 related attitudes in the study sample. Men were 2.37 times more likely to be categorized as Mixed than having Positive Attitudes compared to women. The odds of a person living in the New York metropolitan area being categorized as having Mixed Attitudes compared to Positive Attitudes were also 2.67 times more than for a person living in the Baltimore-Washington area.
Differences in attitudes toward COVID-19 preventive measures were found among sociodemographic variables but not health literacy. Investigating what information channels or methods drive perception of public health information such as COVID-19 may help identify effective dissemination strategies for non-English speaking Korean older adults.
健康素养与青少年和中青年成年人对 COVID-19 预防措施的积极态度有关。本研究调查了非英语的韩裔美国老年人群体及其照顾者的健康素养与对 COVID-19 预防措施的态度之间的关系。此外,该研究还调查了社会人口特征与态度的关联。
从正在进行的涉及巴尔的摩-华盛顿和纽约大都市区的韩裔美国老年人及其照顾者的随机对照试验的潜在参与者中收集了 COVID-19 调查数据(ClinicalTrials.gov 标识符:NCT03909347)。认知正常的韩裔美国老年人及其照顾者被允许参与调查。我们使用潜在剖面分析来寻找对 COVID-19 预防措施的态度具有相似模式的参与者的独特聚类。基于分析,我们采用多项逻辑回归来调查健康素养和社会人口特征如何与聚类相关。
我们根据参与者对 COVID-19 预防措施的反应发现了三个聚类-积极、消极或混合。在研究样本中,健康素养与 COVID-19 相关态度无关。与女性相比,男性被归类为混合态度的可能性是积极态度的 2.37 倍。与生活在巴尔的摩-华盛顿地区的人相比,生活在纽约大都市区的人被归类为混合态度的可能性也高出 2.67 倍。
在社会人口变量中发现了对 COVID-19 预防措施的态度差异,但健康素养没有差异。调查哪些信息渠道或方法推动了对 COVID-19 等公共卫生信息的感知,可能有助于确定针对非英语的韩裔美国老年人的有效传播策略。