The relationship between health literacy and self-care in persons with chronic diseases: a multicenter cross-sectional study

Read the full article See related articles

Discuss this preprint

Start a discussion What are Sciety discussions?

Listed in

This article is not in any list yet, why not save it to one of your lists.
Log in to save this article

Abstract

Background To examine the relationship between health literacy and self-care (maintenance, monitoring, and management) in people with chronic diseases. Methods A multicenter cross-sectional study was conducted in six hospitals (one academic, four teaching, and one general) in the Netherlands among 536 adults (≥ 18 years) with at least one chronic disease between October 2022 and June 2024. Participants completed sociodemographic data, the European Health Literacy Survey Questionnaire (HLS-EU-Q16), the Self-Care of Chronic Illness Inventory (SC-CII v4c), and the Self-Care Self-Efficacy Scale. Associations between health literacy (adequate vs. inadequate) and self-care (maintenance, monitoring and management) were tested with multivariable linear regression adjusted for age, gender, number of chronic conditions, educational level, living situation, and self-efficacy. Results Of 536 adults (mean age 67 ± 14 years, 54% men), 46% had inadequate health literacy. Mean self-care scores were 70.4 ± 14.7 (maintenance), 69.9 ± 22.3 (monitoring), and 70.9 ± 19.7 (management) on a 0-100 scale. In multivariable models, adequate health literacy is associated with better self-care maintenance (β = 5.6, 95% CI 3.1–8.1), self-care monitoring (β = 8.7, 95% CI 5.0-1.5), and self-care management (β = 5.5, 95% CI 2.1–8.9) when adjusting for all controlled variables. However, this association become non-significant after adding self-efficacy, which explained most of the residual variance. Conclusions Adequate health literacy is associated with higher self-care scores among adults with chronic diseases. However, such association was diminished when self-efficacy is accounted for, indicating that self-efficacy mediates the relationship between health literacy and self-care. Clinical trial number: Not applicable

Article activity feed