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Education,literacy, and health: Mediating effects on hypertension knowledge and control
Authors:Anjali U. Pandit  Joyce W. Tang  Stacy Cooper Bailey  Terry C. Davis  Mary V. Bocchini  Stephen D. Persell  Alex D. Federman  Michael S. Wolf
Affiliation:1. Health Literacy and Learning Program, Center for Communication in Healthcare, Division of General Internal Medicine, and Institute for Healthcare Studies, Northwestern University, Chicago, IL, USA;2. Department of Medicine-Pediatrics, Louisiana State University Health Sciences Center at Shreveport, LA, USA;3. Division of General Internal Medicine, Mount Sinai School of Medicine, New York, NY, USA;4. Department of Learning Sciences, School of Education and Social Policy, Northwestern University, Evanston, IL, USA
Abstract:

Objective

To determine whether literacy mediates the association between education, hypertension knowledge and control.

Methods

In-person interviews with a literacy assessment and chart review were conducted with 330 hypertensive patients from six primary care safety net clinics. Mediational analysis was used to test the role of literacy skills in explaining the relationship between education and hypertension knowledge and control.

Results

In multivariate analyses that did not make an adjustment for the other variable, both lower educational attainment and more limited literacy were found to be significant independent predictors of poorer hypertension knowledge and control. When literacy was entered into models that included education only, the association between education and knowledge was fully attenuated and no longer significant (Grades 1–8: β = −0.30, 95% CI = −1.44–0.83), while the relationship between education and blood pressure control was only minimally reduced (AOR 2.46, 95% CI 2.10–2.88). More limited literacy skills also was associated with hypertension control in the final model (AOR 2.68, 95% CI 1.54–4.70).

Conclusion

Patient literacy mediated the relationship between education and hypertension knowledge. Literacy was a significant independent predictor of blood pressure control, but only minimally explained the relationship between education and blood pressure.

Practice implications

Health literacy is critical to the design of educational tools to improve knowledge acquisition. However, in order to impact health outcome, future health literacy studies should also address other psychosocial factors that impact motivation and capability to manage disease.
Keywords:Health literacy   Education   Hypertension knowledge   Blood pressure control
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