Abstract
Health literacy (HL) has been determined for the general population and for subgroups, though the relationship between HL and active transport in rural areas was not explored. The aim of our study is to investigate HL among citizens in an Austrian rural region and to explore the associations between HL and active transport. This cross-sectional telephone survey included 288 adults (171 women) with a mean age of 57.8 (SD 0.9). HL was assessed using the HLS-EU-Q16 questionnaire. Active transport was measured as the minutes per week spent on walking or cycling from A to B. After descriptive analysis, the association between HL and active transport was assessed using linear regression models. The mean HL score for all participants was 37.1 (SD 7.7). Among all subjects, 6.9% showed inadequate HL, 25.7% problematic HL, 38.9% sufficient HL, and 28.5% excellent HL. HL was significantly higher among citizens with high education (p = 0.04) and training/employment in healthcare (p = 0.001). Active transport was not associated with HL (p = 0.281). Active transport in rural areas might be influenced by other predictors like distance to work, street connectivity, and accessible facilities for walking and biking. This needs to be explored further for rural areas.
Highlights
Improving health literacy (HL) is a common public health approach and deals with the empowerment of individuals, organizations, and communities for more independent decision-making in health topics [1]
This study shows a higher HL score for the rural study population compared to national data from the HLS-EU survey
HL was associated with education and being trained or employed in the field of healthcare
Summary
Improving health literacy (HL) is a common public health approach and deals with the empowerment of individuals, organizations, and communities for more independent decision-making in health topics [1]. Sørensen et al [2] defined HL as a comprehensive concept which is “people’s knowledge, motivation, and competences to access, understand, appraise, and apply health information”. An excellent HL enhances the quality of life due to active judgments and decisions concerning healthcare, disease prevention, and health promotion in everyday life [1,2,3]
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