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Health-related behaviors moderate the association between age and self-reported health literacy among Taiwanese women
Authors:Tuyen-Van Duong  Kristine Sørensen  Jürgen M. Pelikan  Stephan Van den Broucke  I-Feng Lin  Ying-Chin Lin
Affiliation:1. College of Public Health and Nutrition, Taipei Medical University, Taipei, Taiwan;2. Department of Environmental Health Sciences, National Health Research Institute, Miaoli, Taiwan;3. Asian Health Literacy Association, Geneva, Switzerland;4. Global Health Literacy Academy, Urmond, Netherlands;5. Health Promoting Hospitals, WHO-CC Health Promotion in Hospitals and Health Care and University of Vienna, Vienna, Austria;6. Faculty of Psychology and Educational Sciences, Université Catholique de Louvain, Louvain-la-Neuve, Belgium;7. School of Public Health, National Yang Ming University, Taipei, Taiwan;8. Department of Family Medicine, Shuang Ho Hospital, Taipei, Taiwan
Abstract:ABSTRACT

The role of health-related behaviors in the association between age and health literacy has not been well-elucidated. The present cross-sectional study evaluated the interactions between age and health-related behaviors in 942 women in Taiwan between February and October 2013. Women aged 18–78 years were randomly sampled and recruited from the national administrative system. Self-reported health literacy was measured by the European Health Literacy Survey Questionnaire (HLS-EU-Q47) in Mandarin, asking about sociodemographics and essential health-related behaviors (watching health-related television, community involvement). The interviews were conducted confidentially by well-trained interviewers after having participants’ consent. In multiple linear regression models adjusted for education attainment, self-perceived social status, ability to pay for medication, and health-related behaviors, health literacy was significantly negatively related to age (unstandardized regression coefficient, B = ?0.04; 95% confidence interval [CI] = (?0.07; 0.00); p = .03). The lower health literacy among older women was significantly modified by watching health-related television programs (from “rarely/not-at-all”, B = ?0.08 (?0.12, ?0.04), p < .001 to “often”; B = 0.10 (0.07, 0.12); p < .001) and community involvement (from “rarely/not-at-all”, B = ?0.06 (?0.10, ?0.03); p = .001 to “often”, B = 0.06 (0.03, 0.08); p < .001). Specific health behaviors were protective of older women’s health literacy and likely their health.
Keywords:Age  community involvement  health literacy  health-related television  women
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