Abstract

Health literacy-sensitive communication has been found to be an important dimension of organizational health literacy measured from the patients’ perspective. Little is known about the role of health literacy-sensitive communication in complex care structures. Therefore, our aim was to assess which hospital characteristics (in terms of process organization) and patient characteristics (e.g., age, chronic illness, etc.) contribute to better perceptions of health literacy-sensitive communication, as well as whether better health literacy-sensitive communication is associated with better patient reported experiences. Data were derived from a patient survey conducted in 2020 in four clinical departments of a university hospital in Germany. Health literacy-sensitive communication was measured with the HL-COM scale. Data from 209 patients (response rate 24.2%) were analyzed with a structural equation model (SEM). Results revealed that no patient characteristics were associated with HL-COM scores. Better process organization as perceived by patients was associated with significantly better HL-COM scores, and, in turn, better HL-COM scores were associated with more patient-reported social support provided by physicians and nurses as well as fewer unmet information needs. Investing into good process organization might improve health literacy-sensitive communication, which in turn has the potential to foster the patient–provider relationship as well as to reduce unmet information needs of patients.

Highlights

  • The multidimensional concept of health literacy was originally developed in the1970s [1]

  • The aim of our study was to assess which factors might contribute to better perceptions of health literacy-sensitive communication, as well as whether better health literacy-sensitive communication is associated with better patient reported experiences

  • Health literacy-sensitive communication measures are an important aspect of organizational health literacy that is relevant for patients

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Summary

Introduction

It has gained increased attention ever since the U.S Department of Education released a report in 1993 showing that a high percentage of the country’s adult population may have insufficient literacy skills to understand written information needed to engage in health-related activity [2]. Congruent with this finding, the European Health Literacy. Survey (HLS-EU) involving eight EU member states revealed that a high percentage of the population did not have adequate health literacy [3].

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