| Literature DB >> 32867807 |
Jehad A Rababah1, Mohammed M Al-Hammouri2, Barbara L Drew3.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: The literature regarding the effect of health literacy on college students' psychological health and quality of life is scarce. The purpose of conducting this cross-sectional study was to examine the effect of health literacy on certain psychological disturbances (perceived stress, depressive symptoms, and impulsivity) and quality of life of college students.Entities:
Keywords: College students; Health literacy; Psychological disturbances; Quality of life; Structural equation modeling
Mesh:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32867807 PMCID: PMC7457482 DOI: 10.1186/s12955-020-01541-7
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Health Qual Life Outcomes ISSN: 1477-7525 Impact factor: 3.186
Participants’ Demographic Characteristics
| Variable | Total ( | |
|---|---|---|
| N | Percentage | |
| Gender | ||
| Male | 164 | 52.9 |
| Female | 146 | 47.1 |
| Year of Study | ||
| First | 65 | 21 |
| Second | 78 | 25.2 |
| Third | 55 | 17.7 |
| ≥ Fourth | 112 | 36.1 |
| Current Smoking | ||
| Yes | 97 | 31.3 |
| No | 213 | 68.7 |
| Field of Study | ||
| Health-relateda | 204 | 65.8 |
| Otherb | 106 | 34.2 |
aHealth-related fields included Medicine, Dentistry, Pharmacy, Nursing, and Applied Medical Sciences
bOther included Engineering, Agriculture, Veterinary Medicine, General Sciences, Computer Sciences, and Architecture
Reliability and Validity of The Measurement Model
| HL | Psychological Disturbances | QOL | CR | AVE | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| HL | .91 | .54 | |||
| Psychological Disturbances | −0.46 | .63 | .37 | ||
| QOL | 0.59 | −0.63 | .87 | .63 |
HL Health literacy, QOL Quality of life, CR Composite reliability, AVE average variance extracted
Note: bold diagonals are squared root of AVE, off-diagonals are correlations
Fig. 1Summary of Measurement Model Fitness, Reliability, and Validity. HL: Health Literacy, HPS: Feeling understood and supported by healthcare providers, HIS: Having sufficient information to manage my health, AMH: Actively managing my health, SS: Social support for health, CA: Appraisal of health information, AE: Ability to actively engage with healthcare providers, NHS: Navigating the healthcare system, FHI: Ability to find good health information, UHI: Understand health information, PSS: Perceived Stress Scale-10, CESD-R: Center for Epidemiologic Studies Depression Scale-Revised, BIS: Barret Impulsiveness Scale-11, QOL: Quality of Life, HF: Health and Functioning, Soc: Social and Economic, PsyS: Psychological/Spiritual, Fam: Family.
Fig. 2SEM Model. HL: Health Literacy, HPS: Feeling understood and supported by healthcare providers, HIS: Having sufficient information to manage my health, AMH: Actively managing my health, SS: Social support for health, CA: Appraisal of health information, AE: Ability to actively engage with healthcare providers, NHS: Navigating the healthcare system, FHI: Ability to find good health information, UHI: Understand health information, PSS: Perceived Stress Scale-10, CESD-R: Center for Epidemiologic Studies Depression Scale-Revised, BIS: Barret Impulsiveness Scale-11, QOL: Quality of Life, HF: Health and Functioning, Soc: Social and Economic, PsyS: Psychological/Spiritual, Fam: Family.
Standardized Regression Weights (β) and Interpretation of The Hypotheses
| Hypothesis | β | S.E | C.R | Interpretation |
|---|---|---|---|---|
H1: Psychological Disturbances ←HL | −.46** | .46 | − 5.25 | When HL goes up by 1 standard deviation, Psychological Disturbances goes down by 0.46 standard deviations. |
H2: QOL ←HL | .37** | .45 | 5.87 | When HL goes up by 1 standard deviation, QOL goes up by 0.37 standard deviations. |
** p < .001
H1–2 Hypothesis 1–2, HL Health Literacy, QOL Quality of Life, S.E Standard Error, C.R Critical Ratio
Note: The S. E and C. R values reported in this table are the unstandardized estimates