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1 core range 0-12, lower scores indicate worse health literacy).
2 conditions after an intervention to improve health literacy.
3 494 included responders, 262 (17.5%) had low health literacy.
4 culties experienced by patients with limited health literacy.
5 re effective techniques that improve patient health literacy.
6 D deficiency, eosinophilic esophagitis, and health literacy.
7 ns from rheumatology to the growing field of health literacy.
8 etes outcomes among patients with inadequate health literacy.
9 aking respondents had inadequate or marginal health literacy.
10 ness was significantly associated with lower health literacy.
11 edical costs and foregone wages, stigma, and health literacy.
12 ural residents had better general/electronic health literacy.
13 s who are disproportionately affected by low health literacy.
14 formation have highlighted the importance of health literacy.
15 were dichotomized as inadequate vs adequate health literacy.
16 level, and rural residents to improve their health literacy.
17 s away from AS, primarily among men with low health literacy.
18 might benefit from strategies to address low health literacy.
19 gs marked by high conspiracy beliefs and low health literacy.
20 coverage for depression and improved mental health literacy.
21 ble, the type of services sought, and mental health literacy.
22 nt Health Questionnaire [PHQ]-9), and mental health literacy.
23 who were >/= 65 years and in those with low health literacy.
24 nce-based medication regimen, and inadequate health literacy.
25 guidelines on writing for patients with low health literacy.
26 related to other self-management skills and health literacy.
27 that is understandable for patients with low health literacy.
28 educational materials for patients with low health literacy.
29 ved, and improvements in self-management and health literacy.
30 to assess patient perceptions of health and health literacy.
31 at part by their level of media literacy and health literacy.
33 nistered subjective measures of numeracy and health literacy; 30-day follow-up was performed by phone
34 fear of stigmatization (72.9%), poor mental health literacy (64.5%), concerns over cost (50.6%), and
35 n a selective screening approach for limited health literacy, a patient-based universal precaution ap
37 ual income, health insurance, comorbidities, health literacy, adult caregiving, and perceived discrim
39 transition have been shown, but how patient health literacy affects transition readiness remains unk
41 s to health care, language barriers, and low health literacy also contribute to the risk of MASLD or
43 valence of inadequate or marginal functional health literacy among English speakers ranged from 26.8%
44 ons demonstrate the feasibility of improving health literacy among higher-risk populations, but resea
45 Little is known about the effects of low health literacy among patients with heart failure, a con
46 rities, but it is unclear whether inadequate health literacy among pregnant individuals is associated
47 efs as mediators of the relationship between health literacy and adherence while controlling for cogn
49 ludes with a summary of recent literature on health literacy and available techniques to improve pati
51 examined the relationship between inadequate health literacy and difficulties learning and retaining
52 fforts are necessary to enhance individual's health literacy and establish health literate environmen
53 study we describe the prevalence of limited health literacy and examine its association with the ris
54 participant selection, methods of measuring health literacy and functional outcomes, missing data, a
55 owed an association (unadjusted) between low health literacy and greater pain and limitations in phys
57 atients with HF were more likely to have low health literacy and less likely to be prescribed angiote
59 ing written information to patients with low health literacy and low vision is beneficial for both pa
60 s, found no significant relationship between health literacy and measures of pain or disease specific
63 Lower education level, minority status, low health literacy and numeracy, and higher severity of dis
65 st the significance of association between e-health literacy and pandemic preparedness setting the le
67 ot show a consistent association between low health literacy and poorer functional outcomes in patien
69 results to audiences with varying levels of health literacy and recommended that particularly sensit
70 se decisions and behaviors are influenced by health literacy and socio-economic conditions, but they
72 tems and language proficiency, adjusting for health literacy and sociodemographic characteristics.
73 er (MDI) technique, the relationship between health literacy and the capacity to learn asthma self-ma
74 ically target health determinants to promote health literacy and to ensure timely utilization of eye
75 ease the demand for care by enhancing mental health literacy and to improve the supply of evidence-ba
76 models to identify risk factors for limited health literacy and to quantify its association with lis
77 ion in a therapeutic clinical trial, limited health literacy and use of Spanish language for medical
79 TION: Studies were included if they measured health literacy and/or reported on the link between outc
80 speaking and to have lower body mass index, health literacy, and <1 comorbidity, but higher blood eo
81 ral mental health services, improving mental health literacy, and addressing regional inequalities ar
82 race, marital status, employment, education, health literacy, and financial status, a 1-unit life cha
83 ommunity empowerment, increase environmental health literacy, and generate individual and policy acti
85 n with multiple medical problems and limited health literacy, and his physician exhibit some of the d
86 those with lower income and education, lower health literacy, and negative illness perceptions in MS.
88 as associated with better general/electronic health literacy; and city residents as compared with rur
89 , demographic, and clinical characteristics; health literacy; and perceived knowledge and concerns ab
91 olicy making, community health planning, and health literacy approaches for all, the kidney communiti
93 ficiency, eosinophilic esophagitis, and poor health literacy are three important problems that potent
95 These findings provide initial support for health literacy as an important determinant of the meani
98 ily contributed to one strand of research in health literacy: assessments of print materials and cons
100 tions of care in adult populations, with low health literacy associated with adverse health outcomes.
101 ucation (beta=2.05; 95% CI [0.71-3.39]), low health literacy (beta=2.06; 95% CI [0.86-3.26]), and ina
103 Clinicians can help patients with limited health literacy by removing unneeded complexity in their
105 y-related interventions, such as community e-Health literacy, can contribute to the preparedness to r
106 alk and tools' approach, combining automated health literacy coaching via conversational agent with d
110 the multi-group analysis, social support and health literacy contributed more to patient activation i
112 ional ability within the child education and health literacy domain, ethnicity within the demography
117 ially smoking cessation, weight control, and health literacy education to reduce the incidence of NCD
118 relative to the role of insurance, race, and health literacy/education, the relationship of geography
121 ments from the fields of risk communication, health literacy, environmental health sciences (EHS), co
124 reduced to its socioeconomic value; improved health literacy, for instance, can result in important h
138 h older people had better general/electronic health literacy; higher educational level was associated
139 vidence demonstrating a relationship between health literacy (HL) and periodontal health is insuffici
140 artment of Health and Human Services defines health literacy (HL) as follows: "The degree to which in
145 lth care providers exists because of lack of health literacy in addition al language and cultural bar
146 y by using the short-form Test of Functional Health Literacy in Adults (s-TOFHLA) in English or Spani
147 adherence using the Short Test of Functional Health Literacy in Adults and the Medication Adherence R
148 (range, 0-4); mean Short Test of Functional Health Literacy in Adults score was 31 +/- 8 (range, 0-3
149 er of teeth and the Short Test of Functional Health Literacy in Adults showed a significant associati
150 and print literacy (Short Test of Functional Health Literacy in Adults) were assessed at baseline in
153 other studies report on efforts to increase health literacy in arthritis, reduce the demands of prin
154 However, there is a lack of research on health literacy in low-resource countries, where materna
157 login activity was associated with adequate health literacy (incidence rate ratio [IRR], 1.51; 95% C
158 tion on research findings included improving health literacy, increased understanding of research, an
159 ignificant improvements in a range of mental health literacy indicators, for example, conceptualisati
160 together with language barriers and limited health literacy influenced experiences of health inequal
161 We examined the hypothesis that caregivers' health literacy influences children's oral-health-care-r
179 re patients with type 2 diabetes, inadequate health literacy is independently associated with worse g
180 formation related to their disease, but poor health literacy is known to impact negatively on medical
185 ividuals) completed language proficiency and health literacy items and were included in the analyses;
187 or reported on the link between outcomes and health literacy levels in patients with osteoporosis, os
190 public health infrastructure, low levels of health literacy, limited acute care and infection preven
191 pled with communication barriers and varying health literacy, limits effective patient engagement.
192 cations literature needs to be joined by the health literacy literature and anthropological work on c
194 It is possible to optimize the contribution health literacy makes in mediating the causes and effect
197 mination of health information and enhancing health literacy may help not only to reduce healthcare b
199 KT; programs to aid candidates with limited health literacy may improve outcomes and reduce disparit
203 to determine whether addressing numeracy and health literacy may reduce 30-day recidivism for patient
205 o 15 with lower scores indicating increasing health literacy (mean [SD], 5.8 [2.3] vs 5.3 [2.0], resp
209 uld work toward shifting the patient-deficit health literacy narrative to that of being the responsib
211 ed HLS-EU-Q16 questionnaire to determine the health literacy of 225 patients with age-related macular
212 The aim of this study was to assess the health literacy of common ocular diseases, namely catara
218 parate Cox regressions revealed that age and health literacy predicted worse health outcomes (P = 0.0
220 lementing an adapted MMI approach focused on health literacy principles may improve trial enrollment
225 nants of health, including cognitive status, health literacy, psychopathology, social support, medica
226 ore than one-third of US adults have limited health literacy, putting them at risk of adverse clinica
227 excluded if they did not complete at least 1 health literacy question or if they did not have at leas
228 ness was significantly associated with lower health literacy (r = 0.30; 95% CI, 0.11-0.47; P = .004),
229 on in websites can help to improve patients' health literacy regarding IVIs, potentially leading to i
230 ially adjusted, multivariable models, higher health literacy remained a significant, stepwise, indepe
231 ignificant predictor of health outcomes, but health literacy remained significant (P < 0.001), demons
233 with retinal disease signify a need for more health literacy research in the field of retinal disease
234 We found that 8.9% of candidates had limited health literacy; risk factors included less than college
235 points vs 0.4 [12.9] points; P < .001), and health literacy scores (2.7 [1.6] points vs 0.1 [1.4] po
236 ing a standard cutoff score <=5 on the Brief Health Literacy Screen (score range 0-12, lower scores i
238 e activity, quality of chronic illness care, health literacy, self-efficacy, motivation, social suppo
240 arge and were not significantly reduced by a health-literacy-sensitive, pharmacist-delivered interven
241 r perceived control, executive function, nor health literacy significantly mediated the association b
243 ic eye diseases such as glaucoma and limited health literacy skills are vulnerable to poor visual out
250 se statin therapy decreased as participants' health literacy, subjective numeracy, and knowledge scor
256 were less likely than patients with adequate health literacy to achieve tight glycemic control (HbA(1
257 healthy ageing, from promoting education in health literacy to improving access to health care, are
258 e majority of immigrant women had inadequate health literacy to manage health information and navigat
259 ought to describe the causal pathway linking health literacy to medication adherence by modeling asth
262 odds ratio for having inadequate or marginal health literacy was 8.62 (95% confidence interval, 5.55-
267 el, having adequate compared with inadequate health literacy was associated with an increase in norma
268 ustment for sex, age, education, and income, health literacy was associated with CKD onset only in ol
270 mixed-effects analyses, limited vs adequate health literacy was associated with lower comprehension
273 owever, the proportion of patients with poor health literacy was high-65% of AMD patients, 73% of DME
278 3,885 adults (mean follow-up 3.9 years), low health literacy was more likely among individuals in wor
282 an integrated managed care organization, low health literacy was significantly associated with higher
285 Low health literacy, compared with adequate health literacy, was associated with the onset of CKD in
286 easily accessible indicator of institutional health literacy, we measured the understandability of li
289 living below the poverty level, and had low health literacy were more likely to be less worried abou
293 as individual differences may enhance mental health literacy, which in turn is associated with improv
294 roximately 80 million Americans have limited health literacy, which puts them at greater risk for poo
295 and possessed a high level of self-assessed health literacy, which was scored from 3 to 15 with lowe
297 e the association of female caregivers' oral health literacy with their knowledge, behaviors, and the
298 iew discusses the concept and measurement of health literacy, with a focus on the care of patients wi
299 efforts to develop interventions to improve health literacy would not necessarily improve health ser
300 red with males had better general/electronic health literacy; younger people as compared with older p