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Evaluation of an Australian Health Literacy Program Delivered in Adult Education Settings

BACKGROUND: Adult education targeting health literacy (HL) may bring added value in the form of improved health. OBJECTIVE: This study evaluated the effects of a HL program as part of an adult education curriculum for adults with low literacy and numeracy. METHODS: This was a partial-cluster randomi...

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Autores principales: McCaffery, Kirsten J., Morony, Suzanne, Muscat, Danielle M., Hayen, Andrew, Shepherd, Heather L., Dhillon, Haryana M., Smith, Sian K., Cvejic, Erin, Meshreky, Wedyan, Luxford, Karen, Nutbeam, Don
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: SLACK Incorporated 2019
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6826892/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/31687657
http://dx.doi.org/10.3928/24748307-20190402-01
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author McCaffery, Kirsten J.
Morony, Suzanne
Muscat, Danielle M.
Hayen, Andrew
Shepherd, Heather L.
Dhillon, Haryana M.
Smith, Sian K.
Cvejic, Erin
Meshreky, Wedyan
Luxford, Karen
Nutbeam, Don
author_facet McCaffery, Kirsten J.
Morony, Suzanne
Muscat, Danielle M.
Hayen, Andrew
Shepherd, Heather L.
Dhillon, Haryana M.
Smith, Sian K.
Cvejic, Erin
Meshreky, Wedyan
Luxford, Karen
Nutbeam, Don
author_sort McCaffery, Kirsten J.
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: Adult education targeting health literacy (HL) may bring added value in the form of improved health. OBJECTIVE: This study evaluated the effects of a HL program as part of an adult education curriculum for adults with low literacy and numeracy. METHODS: This was a partial-cluster randomized controlled trial among 308 adults enrolled in basic education programs in Australia. Of the 308 participants, 141 (46%) were randomized to either the standard program (language, literacy, and numeracy [LLN]), or the HL intervention (LLN with embedded health content); the remainder (n = 167) were allocated to standard intervention programs by the education provider at the class level. The main outcomes were functional HL, self-reported confidence, patient activation, generic HL (ie, HLQ, health knowledge, and self-reported health behavior). Data were collected at baseline, immediately after, and at 6 months post-intervention. KEY RESULTS: Of the 308 participants, 71% had limited literacy and 60% spoke a language other than English at home. Both interventions benefited participants, with improvements from baseline to immediate follow up on individual-level functional HL (e.g., reading a thermometer; HL group 18.4% vs. standard group 7.2%; p = .001), confidence (HL group 0.34 vs. standard group 0.06; p = .014) and health literacy questionnaire (HLQ) subscales. At 6 months, improvements in confidence (p < .001) and some HLQ measures were retained. A consistent pattern of increased improvement in the HL program was observed compared to the standard program, although only some measures reached statistical significance: reading a food label (HL group 6.03/10 correct vs. standard group 5.49/10 correct; p = .022); confidence (p = .008); ability to actively manage health (HLQ) (p = .017), and health knowledge at 6 months (HL group 68% vs. standard group 60% correct, p = .052). HL participants reported being more likely to share course information and rated the program more useful to understand their health. CONCLUSIONS: Improving language, literacy, and numeracy generally has potential public health benefits that are retained at 6 months. Integrating health content adds further value to adult basic learning, is feasible, and potentially scalable. [HLRP: Health Literacy Research and Practice. 2019;3(Suppl.):S42–S57.] PLAIN LANGUAGE SUMMARY: We compared the effect of an adult education-based health literacy (HL) program versus a standard language, literacy, and numeracy program on students' HL skills and psychosocial outcomes. Although students in both trial arms improved their skills, students in the HL program had better outcomes with higher HL, greater confidence, and higher health knowledge scores at 6 months.
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spelling pubmed-68268922019-11-04 Evaluation of an Australian Health Literacy Program Delivered in Adult Education Settings McCaffery, Kirsten J. Morony, Suzanne Muscat, Danielle M. Hayen, Andrew Shepherd, Heather L. Dhillon, Haryana M. Smith, Sian K. Cvejic, Erin Meshreky, Wedyan Luxford, Karen Nutbeam, Don Health Lit Res Pract Original Research BACKGROUND: Adult education targeting health literacy (HL) may bring added value in the form of improved health. OBJECTIVE: This study evaluated the effects of a HL program as part of an adult education curriculum for adults with low literacy and numeracy. METHODS: This was a partial-cluster randomized controlled trial among 308 adults enrolled in basic education programs in Australia. Of the 308 participants, 141 (46%) were randomized to either the standard program (language, literacy, and numeracy [LLN]), or the HL intervention (LLN with embedded health content); the remainder (n = 167) were allocated to standard intervention programs by the education provider at the class level. The main outcomes were functional HL, self-reported confidence, patient activation, generic HL (ie, HLQ, health knowledge, and self-reported health behavior). Data were collected at baseline, immediately after, and at 6 months post-intervention. KEY RESULTS: Of the 308 participants, 71% had limited literacy and 60% spoke a language other than English at home. Both interventions benefited participants, with improvements from baseline to immediate follow up on individual-level functional HL (e.g., reading a thermometer; HL group 18.4% vs. standard group 7.2%; p = .001), confidence (HL group 0.34 vs. standard group 0.06; p = .014) and health literacy questionnaire (HLQ) subscales. At 6 months, improvements in confidence (p < .001) and some HLQ measures were retained. A consistent pattern of increased improvement in the HL program was observed compared to the standard program, although only some measures reached statistical significance: reading a food label (HL group 6.03/10 correct vs. standard group 5.49/10 correct; p = .022); confidence (p = .008); ability to actively manage health (HLQ) (p = .017), and health knowledge at 6 months (HL group 68% vs. standard group 60% correct, p = .052). HL participants reported being more likely to share course information and rated the program more useful to understand their health. CONCLUSIONS: Improving language, literacy, and numeracy generally has potential public health benefits that are retained at 6 months. Integrating health content adds further value to adult basic learning, is feasible, and potentially scalable. [HLRP: Health Literacy Research and Practice. 2019;3(Suppl.):S42–S57.] PLAIN LANGUAGE SUMMARY: We compared the effect of an adult education-based health literacy (HL) program versus a standard language, literacy, and numeracy program on students' HL skills and psychosocial outcomes. Although students in both trial arms improved their skills, students in the HL program had better outcomes with higher HL, greater confidence, and higher health knowledge scores at 6 months. SLACK Incorporated 2019-10-03 /pmc/articles/PMC6826892/ /pubmed/31687657 http://dx.doi.org/10.3928/24748307-20190402-01 Text en © 2019 McCaffery, Morony, Muscat, et al. This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0). This license allows users to copy and distribute, to remix, transform, and build upon the article, for any purpose, even commercially, provided the author is attributed and is not represented as endorsing the use made of the work.
spellingShingle Original Research
McCaffery, Kirsten J.
Morony, Suzanne
Muscat, Danielle M.
Hayen, Andrew
Shepherd, Heather L.
Dhillon, Haryana M.
Smith, Sian K.
Cvejic, Erin
Meshreky, Wedyan
Luxford, Karen
Nutbeam, Don
Evaluation of an Australian Health Literacy Program Delivered in Adult Education Settings
title Evaluation of an Australian Health Literacy Program Delivered in Adult Education Settings
title_full Evaluation of an Australian Health Literacy Program Delivered in Adult Education Settings
title_fullStr Evaluation of an Australian Health Literacy Program Delivered in Adult Education Settings
title_full_unstemmed Evaluation of an Australian Health Literacy Program Delivered in Adult Education Settings
title_short Evaluation of an Australian Health Literacy Program Delivered in Adult Education Settings
title_sort evaluation of an australian health literacy program delivered in adult education settings
topic Original Research
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6826892/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/31687657
http://dx.doi.org/10.3928/24748307-20190402-01
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