Health literacy is on the public health agenda. The goal to "improve the health literacy of the population" was included as an objective in Healthy People 2010 and 2020 Objectives. In 2004, the Institute of Medicine released Health Literacy: A Prescription to End Confusion, which recommended that "the Department of Health and Human Services and other government and private funders should support research leading to the development of causal models explaining the relationship among health literacy, the education system, the health system, and relevant social and cultural systems" (Nielsen-Bohlman, Panzer & Kindig, 2004, p. 55). The U.S. Department of Health and Human Services' 2010 National Action Plan to Improve Health Literacy reinforces the need for conceptual advances in the field by calling for the development and implementation of health literacy Health Literacy Skills Framework 31interventions on the basis of theories and models, drawing from such related disciplines as communication, education, cognitive science, and medical sociology (p. 44).Pleasant, McKinney, and Rickard (2011) indicated that there is a lack of true theoretical frameworks that explain health literacy. Theory should be the foundation for developing reliable and valid measures of health literacy, which will allow the field to better study and understand the role of health literacy in health behavior change. This lack of theory has caused researchers to define health literacy in many different ways (Peerson & Saunders, 2009) and, thus, studies vary significantly depending on the definition and measures used (DeWalt, Berkman, Sheridan, Lohr, & Pignone, 2004;Peerson & Saunders, 2009;Pignone, DeWalt, Sheridan, Berkman, & Lohr, 2005).The absence of a common definition and understanding of health literacy may have slowed the field's progress in developing measures and conducting solid methodological research. There are a variety of models and frameworks that describe factors associated with health literacy skills (Baker, 2006;Mancuso, 2008;Nutbeam, 2000;Paasche-Orlow & Wolf, 2007;von Wagner, Steptoe, Wolf & Wardle, 2009). A comprehensive health literacy theory or framework may spur more professional discussions to help lay the foundation for a new era of theory-driven research.The majority of these frameworks illustrate the effects that health literacy has on health-related outcomes (Lee, Arozullah, & Cho, 2004;Manganello, 2008;Nutbeam, 2000;Paasche-Orlow & Wolf, 2007;Rootman et al., 2002; Schillenger, 2001;von Wagner et al., 2009). However, few illustrate the full continuum of relations among predictors, moderators, mediators, and outcomes of health literacy all in one theory or framework (Pleasant, 2011). PurposeThe purpose of this article is to introduce a framework for conceptualizing health literacy that builds on existing theoretical frameworks. We undertake three activities in the article:1. First, we review and synthesize the several existing theoretical frameworks for health literacy and describe their strengths and weaknesses. 2. Se...
Social ecological models of health often describe multiple levels of influence that interact to influence health. However, it is still common for interventions to target only one or two of these levels, perhaps owing in part to a lack of guidance on how to design multilevel interventions to achieve optimal impact. The convergence strategy emphasizes that interventions at different levels mutually reinforce each other by changing patterns of interaction among two or more intervention audiences; this strategy is one approach for combining interventions at different levels to produce synergistic effects. We used semistructured interviews with 65 representatives in a cross-site national initiative that enhanced health and outcomes for patients with diabetes to examine whether the convergence strategy was a useful conceptual model for multilevel interventions. Using a framework analysis approach to analyze qualitative interview data, we found three synergistic themes that match the convergence strategy and support how multilevel interventions can be successful. These three themes were (1) enhancing engagement between patient and provider and access to quality care; (2) supporting communication, information sharing, and coordination among providers, community stakeholders, and systems; and (3) building relationships and fostering alignment among providers, community stakeholders, and systems. These results support the convergence strategy as a testable conceptual model and provide examples of successful intervention strategies for combining multilevel interventions to produce synergies across levels and promote diabetes self-management and that may extend to management of other chronic illnesses as well.
Decision aids commonly include values clarification exercises to help people consider which aspects of a choice matter most to them, and to help them make decisions that are congruent with their personal values and preferences. Using a randomized online experiment, we examined the influence of values clarification on parental beliefs and intentions about having genomic sequencing for newborns. We recruited 1,186 women and men ages 18-44 who were pregnant or whose partner was pregnant or planning to become pregnant in the next two years. Participants (N = 1,000) completed one of two versions of an online decision aid developed as part of a larger project examining the technical, clinical, and social aspects of using exome sequencing to screen newborns for rare genetic conditions. The education-only version provided information about using genomic sequencing to screen newborns for medically treatable conditions. The educationplus-values-clarification version included the same information, along with a values clarification exercise in which participants classified as important or unimportant five reasons in support of having and five reasons against having their newborn undergo genomic sequencing. We conducted partial correlations, regression analysis, and MANCOVAs with sex, health literacy, and experience with genetic testing as covariates. Participants who completed the decision aid with the values clarification exercise agreed less strongly with four of the five statements against sequencing compared to participants who viewed the education-only decision aid. The groups did not differ on agreement with reasons in support of sequencing. Agreement with four of five reasons against genomic sequencing was negatively associated with intentions to have their newborn sequenced, whereas agreement with all five reasons in support of sequencing were positively associated with intentions.
For people with HIV, important transmission prevention strategies include early initiation and adherence to antiretroviral therapy and retention in clinical care with the goal of reducing viral loads as quickly as possible. Consequently, at this point in the HIV epidemic, innovative and effective strategies are urgently needed to engage and retain people in health care to support medication adherence. To address this gap, the Positive Health Check Evaluation Trial uses a type 1 hybrid randomized trial design to test whether the use of a highly tailored video doctor intervention will reduce HIV viral load and retain people with HIV in health care. Eligible and consenting patients from four HIV primary care clinical sites are randomly assigned to receive either the Positive Health Check intervention in addition to the standard of care or the standard of care only. The primary aim is to determine the effectiveness of the intervention. A second aim is to understand the implementation potential of the intervention in clinic workflows, and a third aim is to assess the costs of intervention implementation. The trial findings will have important real-world applicability for understanding how digital interventions that take the form of video doctors can be used to decrease viral load and to support retention in care among diverse patients attending HIV primary care clinics. in clinical care are important transmission prevention strategies because people with HIV (PWH) who are treated with ART and maintain VL suppression have effectively no risk of sexually transmitting HIV [2-5], and they experience a life expectancy similar to people not infected with HIV [6]. In 2017, of all PWH in the United States, 85.8% knew they were diagnosed and 62.7% were virally suppressed [1]. Consequently, to decrease sexual transmission of HIV, effective interventions are needed to engage PWH in regular health care that supports ART adherence and retention in medical care [4].
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