亚利桑那州北部农村地区成年人的健康素养和 COVID-19 大流行影响。
Health literacy and COVID-19 pandemic impacts among adults in rural northern Arizona.
机构信息
Department of Health Sciences, Northern Arizona University, Flagstaff, AZ, USA.
Department of Biological Sciences, Northern Arizona University, Flagstaff, AZ, USA.
出版信息
Rural Remote Health. 2024 Oct;24(4):9147. doi: 10.22605/RRH9147. Epub 2024 Oct 30.
INTRODUCTION
Limited health literacy - the ability to access, process, and use health information and services - contributes to persistent health inequities. Yet little is known about associations of limited health literacy with impacts from the COVID-19 pandemic, particularly for US adults in rural areas. This study sought to determine associations of limited health literacy with impacts from the COVID-19 pandemic among a diverse sample of adults in rural Northern Arizona.
METHODS
A cross-sectional, interviewer-administered survey was conducted with 119 adults from June 2020 to August 2021. Participants were recruited from two federally qualified health centers and by word of mouth. The Newest Vital Sign was used to measure health literacy, and the Epidemic-Pandemic Impacts Inventory was used to measure the effects of the COVID-19 pandemic on various aspects of personal and family life (eg spent more time on screens and devices, had family celebrations canceled or restricted). Descriptive, bivariate, and multivariable linear regression statistics were computed.
RESULTS
Nineteen percent of participants had limited health literacy, and participants had an average of 22 individual impacts and 2 household impacts of the 92 COVID-19 impacts assessed. Multivariable regression model results showed that being male versus female or having public only versus any private insurance was significantly associated with fewer individual COVID-19 impacts on average. Being black, Indigenous, people of color versus White or being Hispanic, Latino, or Spanish versus not were each associated with significantly more individual COVID-19 impacts on average. Limited versus adequate health literacy was significantly associated with more household COVID-19 impacts on average. Sensitivity analysis results further showed that limited versus adequate health literacy was associated with significantly higher adjusted rates of household social, emotional, and infection COVID-19 impacts.
CONCLUSION
This study's findings highlight the importance of assessing and accounting for health literacy in clinical practice and health services research addressing the impacts of the COVID-19 pandemic and future emergency events.
简介
健康素养有限——即获取、处理和使用健康信息及服务的能力——是造成持续存在的健康不平等现象的一个原因。然而,人们对健康素养有限与 COVID-19 大流行的影响之间的关联知之甚少,尤其是对美国农村地区的成年人而言。本研究旨在确定亚利桑那州北部农村地区的成年人中,健康素养有限与 COVID-19 大流行影响之间的关联。
方法
2020 年 6 月至 2021 年 8 月期间,我们对 119 名成年人进行了一项横断面、访谈者管理的调查。参与者是从两家联邦合格的健康中心招募的,并通过口口相传招募的。采用最新 VitalSign 来衡量健康素养,采用大流行影响清单来衡量 COVID-19 对个人和家庭生活的各个方面的影响(例如,花在屏幕和设备上的时间更多、家庭庆祝活动被取消或限制)。计算了描述性、双变量和多变量线性回归统计数据。
结果
19%的参与者健康素养有限,参与者平均受到 92 项 COVID-19 影响中的 22 项个人影响和 2 项家庭影响。多变量回归模型结果显示,与女性相比,男性或与公共保险相比,任何私人保险的参与者平均受到的个人 COVID-19 影响更少。与白人相比,黑人、原住民、有色人种或与非西班牙裔相比,西班牙裔、拉丁裔或西班牙语裔的参与者平均受到更多的个人 COVID-19 影响。与健康素养充足相比,健康素养有限的参与者平均受到更多的家庭 COVID-19 影响。敏感性分析结果进一步表明,与健康素养充足相比,健康素养有限与家庭社交、情感和感染 COVID-19 影响的调整后发生率显著更高相关。
结论
本研究结果强调了在临床实践和卫生服务研究中评估和考虑健康素养的重要性,这些研究涉及 COVID-19 大流行和未来紧急事件的影响。
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