Abstract

Health literacy became an important competence during the COVID-19 pandemic. Despite outpatient caregivers being a particularly vulnerable occupational group, their health literacy has hardly been examined yet, especially during the pandemic. Hence, this study aimed to explore this field and provide first empirical insights. Data were collected based on a cross-sectional online survey among 155 outpatient caregivers. In particular, health literacy (HLS-EU-Q16), diet and physical activity, pandemic-related worries, perceived information sufficiency and stress perception were examined. Descriptive and ordinal logistic regression analyses were run to test explorative assumptions. The majority of outpatient caregivers reported high values of health literacy (69% on a sufficient level). Although no significant associations between health literacy and health behaviours or perceived information sufficiency were found, perceived information sufficiency and perceived stress (OR = 3.194; 95% CI: 1.542–6.614), and pandemic-related worries (OR = 3.073; 95% CI: 1.471–6.421; OR = 4.243; 95% CI: 2.027–8.884) seem to be related. Therefore, dissemination of reliable information and resource-building measures to reduce worries may be important parameters for improving outpatient caregivers’ health. Our results provide first explorative insights, representing a starting point for further research. Considering outpatient caregivers’ mobile work setting, they need to be provided with adequate equipment and comprehensible information to ensure physically and mentally healthy working conditions.

Highlights

  • Introduction distributed under the terms andThe Coronavirus Disease 2019 (COVID-19) pandemic as a global health problem highlights the importance of health literacy

  • Our study aims to investigate the influential role health literacy played for outpatient caregivers’ health during the first year of the COVID-19 pandemic in Germany

  • It would be advisable to provide outpatient caregivers with sufficient protective equipment (PPE) at all times in order to avoid anxiety and other negative strain reactions, such as stress perception [15,39]. This cross-sectional study focused on the health literacy of outpatient caregivers during the COVID-19 pandemic, a mostly unexplored field [10]

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Summary

Introduction

The Coronavirus Disease 2019 (COVID-19) pandemic as a global health problem highlights the importance of health literacy. Health literacy shapes health behaviours of individuals. During the ongoing pandemic situation, health behaviours, among numerous aspects of everyday life, have changed to prevent infection with the coronavirus [1,2].

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