Development and Validation of the HL6: a Brief, Technology-Based Remote Measure of Health Literacy
Background Most health literacy measures require in-person administration or rely upon self-report. Objective We sought to develop and test the feasibility of a brief, objective health literacy measure that could be deployed via text messaging or online survey. Design Participants were recruited fro...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Journal of general internal medicine : JGIM 2023-02, Vol.38 (2), p.421-427 |
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Format: | Artikel |
Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | Background
Most health literacy measures require in-person administration or rely upon self-report.
Objective
We sought to develop and test the feasibility of a brief, objective health literacy measure that could be deployed via text messaging or online survey.
Design
Participants were recruited from ongoing NIH studies to complete a phone interview and online survey to test candidate items. Psychometric analyses included parallel analysis for dimensionality and item response theory. After 9 months, participants were randomized to receive the final instrument via text messaging or online survey.
Participants
Three hundred six English and Spanish-speaking adults with ≥ 1 chronic condition
Main Measures
Thirty-three candidate items for the new measure and patient-reported physical function, anxiety, depression, and medication adherence. All participants previously completed the Newest Vital Sign (NVS) in parent NIH studies.
Key Results
Participants were older (average 67 years), 69.6% were female, 44.3% were low income, and 22.0% had a high school level of education or less. Candidate items loaded onto a single factor (RMSEA: 0.04, CFI: 0.99, TLI: 0.98, all loadings >.59). Six items were chosen for the final measure, named the HL6. Items demonstrated acceptable internal consistency (
α
=0.73) and did not display differential item functioning by language. Higher HL6 scores were significantly associated with greater educational attainment (
r
=0.41), higher NVS scores (
r
=0.55), greater physical functioning (
r
=0.26), fewer depressive symptoms (
r
=−0.20), fewer anxiety symptoms (
r
=−0.15), and fewer barriers to medication adherence (
r
=−0.30; all
p |
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ISSN: | 0884-8734 1525-1497 |
DOI: | 10.1007/s11606-022-07739-3 |