| Literature DB >> 24112855 |
Kristine Sørensen1, Stephan Van den Broucke, Jürgen M Pelikan, James Fullam, Gerardine Doyle, Zofia Slonska, Barbara Kondilis, Vivian Stoffels, Richard H Osborne, Helmut Brand.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Several measurement tools have been developed to measure health literacy. The tools vary in their approach and design, but few have focused on comprehensive health literacy in populations. This paper describes the design and development of the European Health Literacy Survey Questionnaire (HLS-EU-Q), an innovative, comprehensive tool to measure health literacy in populations.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2013 PMID: 24112855 PMCID: PMC4016258 DOI: 10.1186/1471-2458-13-948
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Public Health ISSN: 1471-2458 Impact factor: 3.295
HLS-EU Health literacy matrix
| Ability to access information on medical and clinical issues | Ability to understand medical information and derive meaning | Ability to interpret and evaluate medical information | Ability to make informed decisions on medical issues | |
| Ability to access information on risk factors for health | Ability to understand information on risk factors and derive meaning | Ability to interpret and evaluate information on risk factors for health | Ability to make informed decisions on risk factors for health | |
| Ability to update oneself on determinants of health in the social and physical environment | Ability to understand information on determinants of health in the social and physical environment and derive meaning | Ability to interpret and evaluate information on health determinants in the social and physical environment | Ability to make informed decisions on health determinants in the social and physical environment |
The characteristics of the focus group sample
| Eight | Five | Six | |
| 22-64 | 24 – 47 | 20 -28 | |
| 2 men/6 women | 3 men/2 women | 2 men/4 women | |
| Greek (5) | Irish | German | |
| Greek/American | Maltese | ||
| Dutch | |||
| Sociologists (2) | Developmental economist; | Students in the Bachelor and Master Programme of European Public Health | |
| Philosophy and semiotics | Sociologist with MSc. Urban | ||
| Health economics | planning; | ||
| Social worker and public | Sociologist; | ||
| health specialist | Trainee accountant with background in accountancy and tax law | ||
| Journalist and lawyer | |||
| Elementary teacher | |||
| Administrative worker |
The characteristics of the pre-test sample
| Gender | 42 males |
| 57 females | |
| Age | 15-81 years old |
| (mean 43.8) | |
| Education | 24% no formal education or primary education |
| 34% secondary education | |
| 9% vocational training | |
| 32% tertiary education | |
| Employment | 62% working |
| 15% studying | |
| 23% not working | |
| Health-related employment | 83% never worked in the health-care sector |
| 27% worked or had worked in the health care sector |
The characteristics of the design and development of HLS-EU-Q
| The rationale for the HLS-EU-Q is to address the lack of European data on health literacy in populations by providing an adequate instrument for collection of data, which can generate insights on national perspectives as well as a comparative analysis of the state of the art of health literacy in Europe. | |
| The aim of the questionnaire is to measure health literacy in (European) populations with reference to the HLS-EU definition and conceptual model on health literacy as outlined by Sorensen et al. [ | |
| Likert-type scales with a four choice format “Very easy, easy, difficult, very difficult”; “Don’t know” only to be ticked by interviewer. | |
| Items generated by a Delphi procedure among consortium members, expert consultation, and literature review with reference to the HLS-EU conceptual model and a deducted matrix suggesting 12 sub-domains of health literacy. | |
| 47 core items were generated, placed first in order of the four information processing dimensions (accessing, understanding, appraising and applying health information to take decisions), then changed to be ordered in relation to the three health domains in focus: healthcare, disease prevention and health promotion. Within these sub-domains, items were placed in logic order according to content and purpose. | |
| A subsequent second section focused on antecedents and consequences of health literacy related to the HLS-EU conceptual model operationalized as 39 items on personal information; health service use, health behaviour, community participation and socio-economic factors. | |
| Pre-test concerning face validity was made in three focus groups in Greece, Ireland and the Netherlands, respectively. | |
| Field test was conducted as face-to-face interviews in Ireland (n = 50) and in the Netherlands (n = 49) to measure quantitative and qualitative aspects of the measurement. | |
| Amendments were made based on | |
| - pre-test | |
| - field test | |
| - consultation process | |
| - plain language examination | |
| - translations | |
| HLS-EU-Q47 (core health literacy related items only); HLS-EU-Q86 (measuring health literacy as well as antecedents and consequences according to the HLS-EU conceptual model). | |
| The HLS-EU-Q86 was applied as part of the European Health Literacy Survey (HLS-EU) in a sample of 8000 participants from the general populations in Austria, Bulgaria, Germany, Ireland, the Netherlands, Poland and Spain [ |