Building health literacy system capacity: a framework for health literate systems

The human and social implications of poor health literacy are substantial and wide-ranging. Health literacy represents the personal competencies and organizational structures, resources and commitment that enable people to access, understand, appraise and use information and services in ways that pr...

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Veröffentlicht in:Health promotion international 2021-12, Vol.36 (Supplement_1), p.i13-i23
Hauptverfasser: Sørensen, Kristine, Levin-Zamir, Diane, Duong, Tuyen V, Okan, Orkan, Brasil, Virginia Visconde, Nutbeam, Don
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container_end_page i23
container_issue Supplement_1
container_start_page i13
container_title Health promotion international
container_volume 36
creator Sørensen, Kristine
Levin-Zamir, Diane
Duong, Tuyen V
Okan, Orkan
Brasil, Virginia Visconde
Nutbeam, Don
description The human and social implications of poor health literacy are substantial and wide-ranging. Health literacy represents the personal competencies and organizational structures, resources and commitment that enable people to access, understand, appraise and use information and services in ways that promote and maintain good health. A large-scale societal improvement of health literacy will require political buy-in and a systematic approach to the development of health literacy capacity at all levels. This article builds the case for enhancing health literacy system capacity and presents a framework with eight action areas to accommodate the structural transformation needed at micro, meso and macro levels, including a health literate workforce, health literate organization, health literacy data governance, people-centred services and environments based on user engagement, health literacy leadership, health literacy investments and financial resources, health literacy-informed technology and innovation, and partnerships and inter-sectoral collaboration. Investment in the health literacy system capacity ensures an imperative and systemic effort and transformation which can be multiplied and sustained over time and is resilient towards external trends and events, rather than relying on organizational and individual behavioural change alone. Nevertheless, challenges still remain, e.g. to specify the economic benefits more in detail, develop and integrate data governance systems and go beyond healthcare to engage in health literacy system capacity within a wider societal context.
doi_str_mv 10.1093/heapro/daab153
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source Oxford University Press Journals All Titles (1996-Current); MEDLINE; Elektronische Zeitschriftenbibliothek - Frei zugängliche E-Journals; Alma/SFX Local Collection
subjects Delivery of Health Care
Government Programs
Health Literacy
Humans
Leadership
Medical Assistance
Supplement
title Building health literacy system capacity: a framework for health literate systems
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