| Literature DB >> 27402048 |
Julii Brainard1, Stephanie Howard Wilsher1, Charlotte Salter1, Yoon Kong Loke2.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: The growing move towards patient-centred care has led to substantial research into improving the health literacy skills of patients and members of the public. Hence, there is a pressing need to assess the methodology used in contemporary randomized controlled trials (RCTs) of interventions directed at health literacy, in particular the quality (risk of bias), and the types of outcomes reported.Entities:
Keywords: Health literacy; Public health; Quality of Evidence; Randomised controlled trial; Risk of Bias
Mesh:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27402048 PMCID: PMC4940982 DOI: 10.1186/s12913-016-1479-2
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Health Serv Res ISSN: 1472-6963 Impact factor: 2.655
Fig. 1Flow diagram of study selection
Average statistics for these attributes of target participants in the 40 selected RCTs
| % Who are not the dominant ethnic group within that country | % Low income (<= US $20 k/year) | % With low or inadequate HL | % with < 12 years of eductn or GED | Mean age (yrs) | Gender % F | Latest observation point after intervention start (weeks) | % clearly used a validated HL instrument |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 57.7 (23–95) | 54.7 (30–76) | 43.3 (23–61) | 36.5 (3–64) | 52 (45–60) | 63.7 (60–77) | 23 (2–26) | 73 |
N = number of studies where data were available. Interquartile 25th–75th percentile range in parentheses
Percentage of studies with stated Risk of Bias in each domain (n = 40)
| Random sequence generation (selection bias) | Allocation concealment (selection bias) | Blinding of participants and personnel bias (performance bias) | Blinding of outcome assessment (detection bias) | Incomplete outcome data (attrition bias) | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| High | 0 % | 15 % | 38 % | 25 % | 33 % |
| Unclear | 28 % | 33 % | 40 % | 40 % | 0 % |
| Low | 73 % | 53 % | 23 % | 35 % | 68 % |
List of outcomes reported in health literacy RCTs published 2010–2014
| Focus of the study | #SS | Knowledge outcomes | #SS | Behavioural outcomes | #SS | Health outcomes |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Medication-related | 4 | How to take medication [ | 1 | Self-reported medication adherence [ | 0 | Number of clinically important medication errors [ |
| Health-related | 4 | Diabetes knowledge or health literacy [ | 1 | Glucose-self-monitoring [ | 0 | Improvement in HbA1C [ |
| 1 | Recall of cancer screening knowledge [ | |||||
| 1 | Breast cancer knowledge [ | 0 | Increase in discussion about screening decisions [ | 0 | Overall health status [ | |
| 1 | Sterilisation knowledge [ | 0 | Improved communication with health care professionals [ | |||
| 1 | Hypertension knowledge [ | 0 | Systolic BP [ | |||
| 1 | Recognition of heart attack symptoms [ | 1 | Improved inhaler technique (COPD) [ | |||
| 0 | Knowledge of cardiovascular disease or stroke and their risk factors [ | 1 | Creation of self-management plan for asthma [ | 1 | Asthma-impact on quality of life indicators [ | |
| 0 | Recognition of stroke symptoms [ | 3 | Self-efficacy [ | 0 | Improvement in LDL-cholesterol [ | |
| Mental health related | 4 | Depression or mental health knowledge and literacy [ | 5 | Attitudes, intentions, stigma or behaviour about seeking support for mental health issues, especially depression [ | 1 | Reduction in emotional distress (including anxiety) [ |
| 2 | Decision-conflict [ | |||||
| Behaviour/lifestyle-related | 1 | Knowledge of healthy nutrition [ | 3 | Nutritional choices and attitudes [ | ||
| 1 | Understanding labels [ | 2 | Increase in exercise [ | 1 | Weight loss [ | |
| 0 | Recall of healthy lifestyle advice [ | 0 | Attempts to comply with multifactor health lifestyle advice [ | 0 | Folate B12 and homocysteine | |
| 0 | Reduced smoking [ | |||||
| 0 | Reduced alcohol consumption [ | |||||
| 0 | Appointment keeping [ | |||||
| 1 | Home safety actions [ |
#SS = Number of studies that reported at least one intervention benefit (statistically significant at p ≤ 0.05) for stated outcome
Percentage of studies with improvement in given number of individual indicators in each KBH areas
| Area | None | 1 outcome | 2 outcomes | 3 outcomes | Totals |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Knowledge | 42.5 % | 32.5 % | 12.5 % | 12.5 % | 100 % |
| Behaviour | 67.5 % | 15 % | 10 % | 7.5 % | 100 % |
| Health | 92.5 % | 5 % | 2.5 % | 0 % | 100 % |