Abstract

Health literacy (HL) refers to the cognitive and social abilities that are determinants in the motivation and capacity of the individual to access, understand and use information for the care of one’s own health. In oncology, increased survival, navigation of the healthcare system, the many different forms of treatment and the management of adverse effects/outcomes make HL a critical factor in patient care. The objective of this study is to identify the structure, content and effectiveness of interventions to improve HL in cancer patients.Materials and methodsA literature review was performed using the ‘(health literacy OR Cancer Literacy) AND Cancer AND Intervention’ strategy on seven multidisciplinary databases. Studies that intervened in subjects diagnosed with cancer and treating HL explicitly as a variable to be measured were included.ResultsOne thousand two hundred and thirty-six abstracts were retrieved. Eight studies met the inclusion criteria. Research focused on patients diagnosed with breast cancer or prostate cancer. Interventions used multimedia resources and face-to-face interactions. No study defined HL. HL was usually a secondary outcome. There is high variability in the design of studies and interventions and in the instruments used to measure HL. The effectiveness of the interventions varied between studies, with improvements that were diminished over time or insufficient in participants with initial low literacy.ConclusionThe evidence to date in interventions oriented to study HL in patients with cancer is focused on other constructs, leaving HL as a phenomenon difficult to define both conceptually and clinically. Variability in designs and measurements makes comparison between interventions difficult. Defining and operationalizing HL is critical to design and measure effective interventions, which must be adapted to patients’ needs.

Highlights

  • Health literacy (HL), known as functional HL, refers to the cognitive and social abilities that have a determining role in the motivation and capacity of the individual to Published: 10/10/2019 Received: 20/02/2019Copyright: © the authors; licensee ecancermedicalscience

  • As for Wang et al [20], the results show an increase in the understanding of prostate cancer terminology, with a significant improvement in patients with low HL in the understanding of terminology related to sexual function compared to subjects with high HL

  • The promotion of HL in cancer patients is a necessary strategy for delivering quality and patient-centred care

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Summary

Introduction

Health literacy (HL), known as functional HL, refers to the cognitive and social abilities that have a determining role in the motivation and capacity of the individual to Published: 10/10/2019 Received: 20/02/2019Copyright: © the authors; licensee ecancermedicalscience. The concept of HL was introduced in the mid-seventies and has been gaining relevancy to the extent that evidence shows that it is the strongest predictor of a person’s health status, along with other social determinants such as age, income, work status, educational level and race/ethnicity [2] Those subjects and groups with low levels of HL are at risk of having worse health than those who possess better HL, which leads to the reproduction of health inequities [1]. The model presented by the World Health Organisation (WHO) [1] based on the European Health Literacy Consortium includes 12 subdivisions under the categories of health promotion, illness prevention and healthcare From this point of view, HL integrates and interacts with concepts such as empowerment and sustainability. Developing a HL model for chronic illnesses, Edwards et al [3] distinguished eight elements: health knowledge, self-care skills, active search and use of information, active communication with the healthcare team, search of treatment options, decision-making, influence of others in HL and expected results in HL

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