
In some communities in Âé¶¹´«Ã½, 35.99 percent of residents report low health literacy, which means that they may struggle to understand basic health information. In other communities, only 5.37 percent report low health literacy. According to a study by the University of Âé¶¹´«Ã½ at Mānoa , led by Assistant Professor Tetine Sentell, these percentages matter for individual health. Those who live in communities where many people report low health literacy have, on average, worse health than people who live in communities where few residents report low health literacy.
The study of 11,779 individuals within 37 communities in Âé¶¹´«Ã½ found that each percentage increase of average low health literacy within a community was associated with an approximately 2 percent increase in poor self-reported health for individuals in that community. This was regardless of individual health literacy, age, gender or access to health insurance.
“From previous work, we already knew that almost 20 percent of adults in Âé¶¹´«Ã½ reported low health literacy and that low individual health literacy was associated with poorer personal health status,” said Sentell. “What our new study found is that community health literacy also matters to your personal health status. Health literacy is an important factor at both the individual and community level.”
Primary-care providers, community health centers and public health facilities should, therefore, consider and address health literacy at both community and individual levels.
“We were surprised at the community variation in low health literacy and how important it was to individual health,” said Sentell. “We know in Âé¶¹´«Ã½ that the community context is important to health in many ways. This study shows that a large increase in health literacy across enough individual members of a community could provide community-wide health benefits. There is increasing funding with relevance for social health factors, including efforts supported by the Affordable Care Act.”
This study was a collaboration between UH Mānoa’s Department of Public Health Sciences, Associate Professor Wei Zhang of the and Kay Baker of the . The article, was published in the
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