Effect of health literacy on help-seeking behavior: A comparison of patients accepting surgery and refusing surgery for urinary incontinence

To compare the health literacy (HL) of the adult females with SUI complaints in terms of their acceptance or non-acceptance of surgery. In this cohort study, the European Health Literacy Survey Questionnaire (HLS-EU- Q47) scores as a measure of health literacy were compared among the two groups of p...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of gynecology obstetrics and human reproduction 2021-04, Vol.50 (4), p.101908-101908, Article 101908
Hauptverfasser: Biyik, Ismail, Usturali Mut, Ayse Nur, Albayrak, Mustafa, Kucuk, Bilgen, Koras, Omer, Keskin, Fatih, Demirci, Hakan
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container_end_page 101908
container_issue 4
container_start_page 101908
container_title Journal of gynecology obstetrics and human reproduction
container_volume 50
creator Biyik, Ismail
Usturali Mut, Ayse Nur
Albayrak, Mustafa
Kucuk, Bilgen
Koras, Omer
Keskin, Fatih
Demirci, Hakan
description To compare the health literacy (HL) of the adult females with SUI complaints in terms of their acceptance or non-acceptance of surgery. In this cohort study, the European Health Literacy Survey Questionnaire (HLS-EU- Q47) scores as a measure of health literacy were compared among the two groups of patients who accepted to undergo surgery for SUI and the ones who did not. Demographic features, weight and BMI values, comorbidity, menopausal status, duration and type of UI, socioeconomic characteristics (marital status, educational level, level of income) and HLS-EU- Q47 survey results of the two groups were compared. We also investigated the reasons regarding the acceptance or refusal of SUI surgery. Among the patients who were offered surgery 474% accepted to undergo operation. Total HLS-EU-Q47 score was 30.04 in the group of patients who accepted surgery and 23.46 in the group who refused surgery. The patients that refused surgery had more often insufficient health literacy level (p=0.001). An excellent health literacy level was higher for patients who agreed to anti-incontinence surgery (p=0.021). Health literacy score of patients with urinary incontinence (UI) who refused surgery was lower than those who accepted surgery. Acceptance of surgery may be increased by providing more understandable and clear information, especially for women with lower HL levels.
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subjects Health literacy
Help-seeking behavior
Incontinence surgery
Stress urinary incontinence
Urinary incontinence
title Effect of health literacy on help-seeking behavior: A comparison of patients accepting surgery and refusing surgery for urinary incontinence
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