| Literature DB >> 30594180 |
Boudewijn B Visscher1, Bas Steunenberg1, Monique Heijmans2, Jolien M Hofstede2, Walter Devillé2,3, Iris van der Heide2, Jany Rademakers4,5.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: In the last decade, the attention for health literacy has increased in the European Union. This is due to three main reasons. First, reviews have shown that inadequate health literacy is associated with worse health outcomes, higher health care use and expenditure. Second, in all European countries the population is aging and the number of chronically ill people is rising. Improving health literacy in this group can offer greater opportunities to take an active part in society, be independent and improve quality of life. Third, since most research on health literacy has been conducted outside Europe and relatively little is known about the development of health literacy interventions and its effects on outcome measures in European countries. The aim of this systematic review was to assess the evidence on the effectiveness of health literacy interventions in the European Union published between 1995 and 2018.Entities:
Keywords: Europe; Health literacy; Interventions; Review
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 30594180 PMCID: PMC6310940 DOI: 10.1186/s12889-018-6331-7
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Public Health ISSN: 1471-2458 Impact factor: 3.295
Fig. 1PRISMA diagram
Characteristics of interventions included (n = 23)
| Characteristics | |
|---|---|
| Publication year | 2005 ( |
| 2007 ( | |
| 2010 ( | |
| 2011 ( | |
| 2012 ( | |
| 2013 ( | |
| 2015 ( | |
| 2016 ( | |
| 2017 ( | |
| Country | Austria ( |
| Denmark ( | |
| Germany ( | |
| Ireland ( | |
| Netherlands ( | |
| United Kingdom ( | |
| Taiwan ( | |
| Study design | Cohort analytic group design ( |
| Cohort (one group pre/post) ( | |
| Controlled trial ( | |
| Interrupted time series ( | |
| Randomized controlled trial (RCT) ( | |
| Observational study ( | |
| Study Setting | Community ( |
| Health Professionals ( | |
| Outpatients ( | |
| Telephone and/or mail intervention ( | |
| Duration of intervention and follow-up | No follow-up ( |
| Follow up ≤3 months ( | |
| Follow-up> 3 months ( | |
| Unknown ( | |
| Age of participants | Children (8–12) ( |
| Adults (> 16) ( | |
| Health Literacy Measure | Critical Health Competence List ( |
| Brief questions to identify patient with inadequate health literacy ( | |
| Critical HL assessed by interview ( | |
| Level of Knowledge ( | |
| REALM-R ( | |
| Newest Vital Sign Test ( | |
| Level of reading ability ( | |
| Level of mild intellectual disabilities ( | |
| Numeracy competence ( | |
| Skills towards decision making in a health context ( | |
| Not specified ( | |
| Danish version of TOFHLA ( | |
| Dutch version of SAHL ( | |
| Focus of included studies | Disease specific: ( |
| People working or using health care ( | |
| Hard to reach groups ( | |
| Outpatients not specified ( | |
| People with mild intellectual disabilities ( | |
| Smokers ( | |
| General population ( | |
| Health issues | Diabetes, Cancer, OA, MS, RA, participation in treatment, knowledge, understanding of medication, adherence to medication, interpretation of information about treatment, appraisal skills in judging medical information, self-management, active participation in treatment, empowerment, self-management skills and confidence, motivation to self-manage, risk-communication, decision-making in medical treatment, symptom monitoring and recognition, reaching disadvantaged groups, health promotion, health status, social participation and integration, access to health care, health care use, communication of medical information. |
aThe total number of countries is more than 23, because the study of Muller et al. was performed in the United Kingdom, Austria, Germany, Ireland, and Taiwan
Quality assessment (using the EPHPP), intervention type and outcome of reviewed studies N = 23
| Study (primary author) | Selection bias | Study design | Confounders | Blinding | Data collection methods | Withdrawals and drop-outs | Global rating | intervention type | Dimension of health literacy | Outcome |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Meppelink et al., 2015 [ | S | S | S | M | S | S | Strong | Web-based intervention | Functional | Functional health literacy |
| Critical | Critical health literacy | |||||||||
| Elbert et al., 2016 [ | M | S | S | M | S | W | Moderate | Web-based intervention | Functional | Healthy lifestyle |
| Gilbert et al., 2012 [ | M | S | S | S | W | M | Moderate | Tailored information leaflet | Functional | Healthy lifestyle |
| Critical | ||||||||||
| Meppelink et al., 2015 [ | W | S | S | M | S | M | Moderate | Web-based intervention | Functional | Functional health literacy |
| Critical | Critical health literacy | |||||||||
| Heasum et al., 2017 [ | M | S | S | W | S | M | Moderate | Web-based intervention | Functional | Functional health literacy |
| Sahm et al., 2011 [ | M | S | S | M | M | W | Moderate | Tailored information leaflet | Functional | Understanding of drug label |
| Walker et al., 2007 [ | M | S | S | M | S | W | Moderate | Tailored information leaflet | Functional | Knowledge |
| Webb et al., 2008 [ | M | M | W | M | M | M | Moderate | Group-based intervention | Functional | Self-management |
| Interactive | Healthy lifestyle | |||||||||
| Health status | ||||||||||
| Access to health care | ||||||||||
| Ability to make treatment choices | ||||||||||
| Symptom recognition and monitoring | ||||||||||
| Berger et al., 2013 [ | W | M | W | M | W | M | Weak | Group-based intervention | Critical | Level of critical health literacy |
| Self-management | ||||||||||
| Blanson Henkeman et al., 2013 [ | W | S | W | W | S | S | Weak | Individual, personal contact | Functional | Knowledge |
| Self-management | ||||||||||
| Boxell et al., 2012 [ | W | M | W | M | S | S | Weak | Tailored information leaflet | Functional | Symptom recognition and monitoring |
| Garcia-Retamero et al., 2010 [ | W | M | S | M | M | W | Weak | Web-based intervention | Functional | Understanding of health risk |
| Galesic et al., 2011 [ | W | S | W | M | M | W | Weak | Aids to support numerical concepts | Functional | Understanding of health risk |
| Galesic et al., 2013 [ | W | S | M | W | W | W | Weak | Aids to support numerical concepts | Functional | Ability to make treatment choices |
| Haesum et al., 2016 [ | W | M | W | M | M | S | Weak | Web-based intervention | Functional | Functional health literacy |
| Self-management | ||||||||||
| Shared decision making | ||||||||||
| Kasper et al., 2005 [ | M | M | M | W | M | W | Weak | Aids to support numerical concepts | Functional | Level of functional health literacy |
| Shared decision making | ||||||||||
| Lilholt et al., 2016 [ | M | M | W | M | W | M | Weak | Web-based intervention | Functional | Functional health literacy |
| Health status | ||||||||||
| Self-management | ||||||||||
| Shared decision making | ||||||||||
| Long et al., 2011 [ | W | M | W | M | W | W | Weak | Self-management support by call-center | Functional | Knowledge |
| Critical | Empowerment | |||||||||
| Self-management | ||||||||||
| Critical health literacy | ||||||||||
| Matic-Strametz et al., 2012 [ | W | S | W | W | M | S | Weak | Group-based intervention | Functional | Knowledge |
| Critical | Critical health literacy | |||||||||
| Muller et al., 2017 [ | W | S | S | M | S | W | Weak | Web-based intervention | Functional | Functional health ltieray |
| Healthy lifestyle | ||||||||||
| Self-management | ||||||||||
| Neville et al., 2005 [ | W | M | W | M | W | W | Weak | Web-based intervention | Functional | Understanding of health risk |
| Multi-component programme | Self-management | |||||||||
| Individual, personal contact | Understanding of drugs label | |||||||||
| Reiter et al., 2012 [ | W | M | W | W | W | W | Weak | Group-based intervention | Functional | Knowledge |
| Multi-component programme | Healthy lifestyle | |||||||||
| Health status | ||||||||||
| White et al., 2012 [ | S | S | W | W | S | W | Weak | Individual, personal contact | Functional | Self-management |
| Critical | Ability to make treatment choices | |||||||||
| Access to health care | ||||||||||
| Empowerment | ||||||||||
| Healthy lifestyle |
S strong, M moderate, W weak. Global Rating is calculated using information across all six domains: strong (no weak ratings), moderate (one weak rating), or weak (two or more weak ratings)