
Cognition, educational attainment and diabetes distress predict poor health literacy in diabetes: A cross-sectional analysis of the SHELLED study
Author(s) -
Pamela Chen,
Michele L. Callisaya,
Karen Wills,
TM Greenaway,
Tania Winzenberg
Publication year - 2022
Publication title -
plos one
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.99
H-Index - 332
ISSN - 1932-6203
DOI - 10.1371/journal.pone.0267265
Subject(s) - health literacy , educational attainment , distress , medicine , health care , gerontology , diabetes mellitus , literacy , dementia , health equity , cross sectional study , disease , psychology , clinical psychology , public health , nursing , pedagogy , pathology , endocrinology , economics , economic growth
Objectives To identify factors that predict poor health literacy amongst people with diabetes. Design Cross-sectional analysis of baseline data from a prospective study of diabetic foot disease. Setting Patients attending a tertiary hospital diabetes outpatient clinic in Tasmania, Australia. Participants 222 people with diabetes mellitus, aged >40 years, with no history of foot ulceration, psychotic disorders or dementia. Outcome measures Health literacy was measured using the short form Test of Functional Health Literacy in Adults (functional health literacy), and the Health Literacy Questionnaire (HLQ), which measures nine domains of health literacy. Predictors included demographic characteristics, cognition, diabetes distress, depression, and educational attainment. Results In multivariable analysis, greater educational attainment (OR 0.88, 95% CI 0.76, 0.99) and poorer cognition (OR 0.71, 95% CI 0.63, 0.79) were associated with poorer functional health literacy. Age was negatively associated with domains of appraisal of health information and ability to find good health information (both beta = -0.01). Educational attainment was positively associated with four domains, namely having sufficient information to manage my health, actively managing my health, appraisal of and ability to find good health information (beta ranging from +0.03 to 0.04). Diabetes distress was negatively associated with five domains: having sufficient information to manage my health, social support for health, ability to actively engage with healthcare providers, navigating the healthcare system and ability to find good health information (beta ranging from -0.14 to -0.18). Conclusion Poorer cognition and poorer educational attainment may be detrimental for an individual’s functional health literacy, and education, diabetes distress and older age detrimental across multiple health literacy domains. Clinicians and policy makers should be attuned to these factors when communicating with people with diabetes and in designing healthcare systems to be more health-literacy friendly in order to improve diabetes outcomes.