Abstract

Background. Health literacy has been separately associated with socio-economic status and worse health status and outcomes. However, the magnitude of the associations between health literacy and health status and outcomes may not be evenly distributed across society. This study aims to estimate and compare the associations between health status, health behaviours, and healthcare utilisation within different levels of social status in the Irish population. Materials and methods. Data from Ireland collected as part of the 2011 European Health Literacy Survey were analysed. General health literacy was measured on a 0–50 scale, low to high. There were four binary outcomes: long-standing health conditions, smoking, hospital visits in the last 12 months, and self-rated health status. Logistic regression analysis was conducted to estimate the likelihood of each health outcome. Health literacy was treated as the main independent variable. Marginal effects were calculated using the delta method to demonstrate the change in likelihood of each outcome associated with a 5-point increase in health literacy score. The sample was grouped into tertiles based on self-reported social status, and models were replicated and compared for each tertile. Models were adjusted for known correlates of health literacy and health: age, gender, and education. Analysis was conducted using Stata V14. Results. Higher health literacy scores were associated with a lower probability of having a limiting illness within the low social status group only. Higher health literacy scores were associated with a lower probability of three or more hospital visits in the past 12 months in the low and middle social status groups. For people in the low and middle social status groups, higher health literacy levels were associated with a lower probability of being a current smoker. The associations between health literacy and self-rated health status were similar in each social status group. Conclusions: Improvement in population health literacy may reduce the prevalence of long-term chronic health conditions, reduce smoking levels, and result in fewer hospital visits. Whilst improved health literacy should improve behaviours and outcomes in all groups, it should have a more marked impact in lower social status groups, and hence contribute to reducing the observed social disparities in these health outcomes.

Highlights

  • The term health inequality refers to the unjust nature of health differences between social groups, generated by social conditions, describing the pattern in which those from economically and socially poorer backgrounds run higher risks of premature death and contracting chronic or serious illness [1].Int

  • This study indicates that, for three of the four outcomes explored in this study, interventions to increase health literacy may have a larger effect for people in the lowest social status tertile or low and middle social status tertiles compared with people in higher tertiles

  • Whilst this study indicates that health literacy interventions targeted at people from lower and middle social status tertiles may reduce inequalities in the prevalence of chronic conditions, smoking, and hospital attendance, further evidence is required from the evaluation of interventions that includes measurement of Socio-Economic Status (SES), before and after measurement of health literacy, and sufficiently long follow-up to capture changes in the outcomes of interest

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Summary

Introduction

The term health inequality refers to the unjust nature of health differences between social groups, generated by social conditions, describing the pattern in which those from economically and socially poorer backgrounds run higher risks of premature death and contracting chronic or serious illness [1].Int. Health literacy has been separately associated with socio-economic status and worse health status and outcomes. The magnitude of the associations between health literacy and health status and outcomes may not be evenly distributed across society. This study aims to estimate and compare the associations between health status, health behaviours, and healthcare utilisation within different levels of social status in the Irish population. Data from Ireland collected as part of the 2011 European Health Literacy Survey were analysed. General health literacy was measured on a 0–50 scale, low to high. There were four binary outcomes: long-standing health conditions, smoking, hospital visits in the last 12 months, and self-rated health status. Logistic regression analysis was conducted to estimate the likelihood of each health outcome

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