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Improving low health literacy and patient engagement: A social ecological approach
Affiliation:1. Division of Cardiology, Children''s National Health System and Department of Pediatrics George Washington University School of Medicine and Health Sciences, Washington, DC;2. Department of Biostatistics and Epidemiology, Center for Clinical Epidemiology and Biostatistics, Perelman School of Medicine University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, PA;3. Division of Cardiology, The Children''s Hospital of Philadelphia and Department of Pediatrics Perelman School of Medicine University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, PA;1. Department of Pathology, National Hospital Organization, Osaka National Hospital, Osaka, 5400006, Japan;2. Department of Pathology, Yao Municipal Hospital, Yao, 5810069, Japan;3. Department of Pathology and Applied Neurobiology, Graduate School of Medical Science, Kyoto Prefectural University of Medicine, Kyoto, 6028566, Japan;4. Department of Surgery, Breast Surgery, National Hospital Organization, Osaka National Hospital, Osaka, 5400006, Japan;1. Luna nanoWorks Division, Luna Innovations Inc., Danville, VA, USA;2. University of North Carolina Greensboro, Joint School of Nanoscience and Nanoengineering, Greensboro, NC, USA
Abstract:ObjectiveThis article posits four principal objectives related to the overarching goal of broadening the conceptualization of health literacy. We propose a social ecological approach to health literacy and patient engagement by illustrating how this multilevel approach offers an array of strategic options for interventions.DiscussionA social ecological approach supports a broader understanding of health literacy that aligns with increased patient engagement. The ecological model highlights the importance of context, demonstrates how health literacy and patient engagement are inextricably connected, and gives rise to strategies to enhance them both. We illustrate the five multilevel intervention strategies for addressing low health literacy and promoting patient engagement: accumulation, amplification, facilitation, cascade, and convergence strategies. In addition, we provide a theoretical foundation to facilitate the development of interventions to enhance health literacy and ultimately increase patient engagement.ConclusionsThe practice implications of adopting a broader social ecological perspective to address low health literacy shifts the field from thinking about individual educational interventions to how individual interventions may be augmented or supported by interventions at additional levels of influence. The potential benefit of adopting a multilevel intervention approach is that combining interventions could produce synergies that are greater than interventions that only utilize one level of influence.
Keywords:Health literacy  Patient engagement  Social ecological model  Intervention  Multilevel
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