Relationship Between Literacy, Knowledge, Self-Care Behaviors, and Heart Failure-Related Quality of Life Among Patients With Heart Failure |
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Authors: | Aurelia Macabasco-O��Connell PhD RN ACNP Darren A. DeWalt MD MPH Kimberly A. Broucksou MSW MPA Victoria Hawk MPH RD LDN David W. Baker MD MPH Dean Schillinger MD Bernice Ruo MD MAS Kirsten Bibbins-Domingo PhD MD George M. Holmes PhD Brian Erman BA MS Morris Weinberger PhD Michael Pignone MD MPH |
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Affiliation: | UCLA School of Nursing, University of California, Olive View-UCLA Medical Center Los Angeles, 700 Tiverton Ave., 4-242 Factor Blvd., Los Angeles, CA 90095, USA. aoconnel@sonnet.ucla.edu |
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Abstract: |
BACKGROUND We sought to examine the relationship between literacy and heart failure-related quality of life (HFQOL), and to explore whether literacy-related differences in knowledge, self-efficacy and/or self-care behavior explained the relationship. METHODS We recruited patients with symptomatic heart failure (HF) from four academic medical centers. Patients completed the short version of the Test of Functional Health Literacy in Adults (TOFHLA) and questions on HF-related knowledge, HF-related self-efficacy, and self-care behaviors. We assessed HFQOL with the Heart Failure Symptom Scale (HFSS) (range 0?C100), with higher scores denoting better quality of life. We used bivariate (t-tests and chi-square) and multivariate linear regression analyses to estimate the associations between literacy and HF knowledge, self-efficacy, self-care behaviors, and HFQOL, controlling for demographic characteristics. Structural equation modeling was conducted to assess whether general HF knowledge, salt knowledge, self-care behaviors, and self-efficacy mediated the relationship between literacy and HFQOL. RESULTS We enrolled 605 patients with mean age of 60.7 years; 52% were male; 38% were African-American and 16% Latino; 26% had less than a high school education; and 67% had annual incomes under $25,000. Overall, 37% had low literacy (marginal or inadequate on TOFHLA). Patients with adequate literacy had higher general HF knowledge than those with low literacy (mean 6.6 vs. 5.5, adjusted difference 0.63, p?0.01), higher self-efficacy (5.0 vs. 4.1 ,adjusted difference 0.99, p?0.01), and higher prevalence of key self-care behaviors (p?0.001). Those with adequate literacy had better HFQOL scores compared to those with low literacy (63.9 vs. 55.4, adjusted difference 7.20, p?0.01), but differences in knowledge, self-efficacy, and self-care did not mediate this difference in HFQOL. CONCLUSION Low literacy was associated with worse HFQOL and lower HF-related knowledge, self-efficacy, and self-care behaviors, but differences in knowledge, self-efficacy and self-care did not explain the relationship between low literacy and worse HFQOL. |
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