Background Health literacy concerns the ability of citizens to meet the complex demands of health in modern society. Data on the distribution of health literacy in general populations and how health literacy impacts health behavior and general health remains scarce. The present study aims to investigate the prevalence of health literacy levels and associations of health literacy with socioeconomic position, health risk behavior, and health status at a population level. Methods A nationwide cross-sectional survey linked to administrative registry data was applied to a randomly selected sample of 15,728 Danish individuals aged ≥25 years. By the short form HLS-EU-Q16 health literacy was measured for the domains of healthcare, disease prevention, and health promotion. Adjusted multinomial logistic regression analyses were used to estimate associations of health literacy with demographic and socioeconomic characteristics, health risk behavior (physical activity, smoking, alcohol consumption, body weight), and health status (sickness benefits, self-assessed health). Results Overall, 9007 (57.3%) individuals responded to the survey. Nearly 4 in 10 respondents faced difficulties in accessing, understanding, appraising, and applying health information. Notably, 8.18% presented with inadequate health literacy and 30.94% with problematic health literacy. Adjusted for potential confounders, regression analyses showed that males, younger individuals, immigrants, individuals with basic education or income below the national average, and individuals receiving social benefits had substantially higher odds of inadequate health literacy. Among health behavior factors (smoking, high alcohol consumption, and inactivity), only physical behavior [sedentary: OR: 2.31 (95% CI: 1.81; 2.95)] was associated with inadequate health literacy in the adjusted models. The long-term health risk indicator body-weight showed that individuals with obesity [OR: 1.78 (95% CI: 1.39; 2.28)] had significantly higher odds of lower health literacy scores. Poor self-assessed health [OR: 4.03 (95% CI: 3.26; 5.00)] and payments of sickness absence compensation benefits [OR: 1.74 (95% CI: 1.35; 2.23)] were associated with lower health literacy scores. Conclusions Despite a relatively highly educated population, the prevalence of inadequate health literacy is high. Inadequate health literacy is strongly associated with a low socioeconomic position, poor health status, inactivity, and overweight, but to a lesser extent with health behavior factors such as smoking and high alcohol consumption.
In our study, we found that bystander CPR and defibrillation were associated with risks of brain damage or nursing home admission and of death from any cause that were significantly lower than those associated with no bystander resuscitation. (Funded by TrygFonden and the Danish Heart Foundation.).
Potassium levels outside the interval of 4.1–4.7 mmol/L were associated with increased mortality risk in patients with hypertension.
OBJECTIVES Early thrombosis (ET) contributes to autogenous arteriovenous fistula (AVF) failure. We studied patients undergoing AVF placement in the Hemodialysis Fistula Maturation (HFM) Study, a prospective, observational cohort study, using a nested case-control analysis to identify pre-operative and intra-operative predictors of ET. METHODS ET cases were compared to controls who were matched on gender, age, diabetes, dialysis status, and surgeon fistula volume. ET was defined as thrombosis diagnosed by physical exam or ultrasound within 18 days of AVF creation. Conditional logistic regression models were fit to identify risk factors for ET. RESULTS Thirty-two ET cases (5.3%) occurred among 602 study participants; 198 controls were matched. ET was associated with female gender (OR=2.75, CI 1.19–6.38, P=0.018), fistula location (forearm vs. upper arm) (OR=2.76, CI 1.05–7.23, P=0.039), feeding artery (radial vs. brachial) (OR=2.64, CI 1.03–6.77, P=0.043) and arterial diameter (OR=1.52, CI 1.02–2.26, P=0.039, per mm smaller). Draining vein diameter was nonlinearly associated with ET, with highest risk in 2–3 mm veins. Surprisingly, ET risk was lower in diabetics (OR=0.19, CI 0.07–0.47, P=0.0004), lower with less nitroglycerin-mediated brachial artery dilatation (NMD%) (OR=0.42, CI 0.20–1.92, P=0.029 for each 10% lower) and higher with lower carotid-femoral pulse wave velocity (OR=1.49, CI 1.02–2.20, P=0.041, for each m/sec lower). Intraoperative protamine use was associated with a higher ET risk (OR 3.26, CI 1.28-∞, P=0.038). Surgeon’s intraoperative perceptions were associated with ET: surgeons’ greater concern about maturation success (likely, marginal, unlikely) was associated with higher thrombosis risk (OR 8.09, CI 4.03-∞, p<0.0001, per category change), as were absence vs. presence of intraoperative thrill (OR 21.0, CI 5.07-∞, P=0.0002) and surgeons’ reported frustration during surgery (OR 6.85, CI 2.70-∞, P=0.0004). Reduced extent of intraoperative thrill (proximal, mid or distal third of the forearm or upper arm, based on AVF placement) was also associated with ET (OR 2.91, CI 1.31-∞, P=0.014, per diminished level). Oral antithrombotic medication use was not significantly associated with ET. CONCLUSIONS ET was found to be associated with female gender, forearm AVF, smaller arterial size, draining vein diameter of 2–3 mm, and protamine use. Paradoxically, diabetes and stiff, noncompliant feeding arteries were associated with lower frequency of ET. Absent or attenuated intraoperative thrill, and both surgeon frustration and concern about successful maturation during surgery, were strongly correlated with ET.
Background— Data on long-term function of out-of-hospital cardiac arrest survivors are sparse. We examined return to work as a proxy of preserved function without major neurologic deficits in survivors. Methods and Results— In Denmark, out-of-hospital cardiac arrests have been systematically reported to the Danish Cardiac Arrest Register since 2001. During 2001–2011, we identified 4354 patients employed before arrest among 12 332 working-age patients (18–65 years), of whom 796 survived to day 30. Among 796 survivors (median age, 53 years [quartile 1–3, 46–59 years]; 81.5% men), 610 (76.6%) returned to work in a median time of 4 months [quartile 1–3, 1–19 months], with a median time of 3 years spent back at work. A total of 74.6% (N=455) remained employed without using sick leave during the first 6 months after returning to work. This latter proportion of survivors returning to work increased over time (66.1% in 2001–2005 versus 78.1% in 2006–2011; P =0.002). In multivariable Cox regression analysis, factors associated with return to work with ≥6 months of sustainable employment were as follows: (1) arrest during 2006–2011 versus 2001–2005, hazard ratio (HR), 1.38 (95% CI, 1.05–1.82); (2) male sex, HR, 1.48 (95% CI, 1.06–2.07); (3) age of 18 to 49 versus 50 to 65 years, HR, 1.32 (95% CI, 1.02–1.68); (4) bystander-witnessed arrest, HR, 1.79 (95% CI, 1.17–2.76); and (5) bystander cardiopulmonary resuscitation, HR, 1.38 (95% CI, 1.02–1.87). Conclusions— Of 30-day survivors employed before arrest, 76.6% returned to work. The percentage of survivors returning to work increased significantly, along with improved survival during 2001–2011, suggesting an increase in the proportion of survivors with preserved function over time.
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.
customersupport@researchsolutions.com
10624 S. Eastern Ave., Ste. A-614
Henderson, NV 89052, USA
This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply.
Copyright © 2024 scite LLC. All rights reserved.
Made with 💙 for researchers
Part of the Research Solutions Family.