The association between sex, age and health literacy and the uptake of cardiovascular prevention: a cross-sectional analysis in a primary care setting
Tschaftary A, Hess N, Hiltner S, Oertelt-Prigione S (2018)
Journal of Public Health 26(5): 551-558.
Zeitschriftenaufsatz
| Veröffentlicht | Englisch
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Autor*in
Tschaftary, Alessa;
Hess, Natascha;
Hiltner, Sarah;
Oertelt-Prigione, SabineUniBi
Abstract / Bemerkung
Aim:
As the incidence of cardiovascular diseases is rising worldwide, prevention measures for the general population become increasingly important. Herein we aim at identifying social determinants associated with the willingness to engage in prevention and healthy lifestyle choices.
Subject and methods:
A total of 1,056 (70% response rate) of the patients attending a cardiology/primary care practice in the urban area of Berlin, Germany, were recruited to fill out a questionnaire for this cross-sectional survey. Patients provided sociodemographic and health literacy information, described their attitude towards prevention and lifestyle choices, as well as hurdles and requests towards measure design.
Results:
Sex, age and health literacy emerged as prime influencers of preventative choices. Sex differences affected the attendance of screening measures and lifestyle choices, although no differences emerged in attitude towards prevention between women and men. Low health literacy consistently associated with consideration of healthy lifestyle changes, but not with active engagement in them. Men more freqeuntly reported a need for clear explanation of the utility of prevention by their physicians (44% vs 37%) and low health literacy correlated with an increased request for free or subsidized offers (56% vs 44%). Time constraint was the most frequently mentioned hurdle (32%) for attendance, followed by costs (19%).
Conclusion:
Sex, age and health literacy affect engagement in healthy lifestyle choices and expectations towards preventative measure design. Consideration of these differences will allow better tailoring of preventative offers to the users’ needs to increase their uptake.
As the incidence of cardiovascular diseases is rising worldwide, prevention measures for the general population become increasingly important. Herein we aim at identifying social determinants associated with the willingness to engage in prevention and healthy lifestyle choices.
Subject and methods:
A total of 1,056 (70% response rate) of the patients attending a cardiology/primary care practice in the urban area of Berlin, Germany, were recruited to fill out a questionnaire for this cross-sectional survey. Patients provided sociodemographic and health literacy information, described their attitude towards prevention and lifestyle choices, as well as hurdles and requests towards measure design.
Results:
Sex, age and health literacy emerged as prime influencers of preventative choices. Sex differences affected the attendance of screening measures and lifestyle choices, although no differences emerged in attitude towards prevention between women and men. Low health literacy consistently associated with consideration of healthy lifestyle changes, but not with active engagement in them. Men more freqeuntly reported a need for clear explanation of the utility of prevention by their physicians (44% vs 37%) and low health literacy correlated with an increased request for free or subsidized offers (56% vs 44%). Time constraint was the most frequently mentioned hurdle (32%) for attendance, followed by costs (19%).
Conclusion:
Sex, age and health literacy affect engagement in healthy lifestyle choices and expectations towards preventative measure design. Consideration of these differences will allow better tailoring of preventative offers to the users’ needs to increase their uptake.
Erscheinungsjahr
2018
Zeitschriftentitel
Journal of Public Health
Band
26
Ausgabe
5
Seite(n)
551-558
ISSN
2198-1833
eISSN
1613-2238
Page URI
https://pub.uni-bielefeld.de/record/2959977
Zitieren
Tschaftary A, Hess N, Hiltner S, Oertelt-Prigione S. The association between sex, age and health literacy and the uptake of cardiovascular prevention: a cross-sectional analysis in a primary care setting. Journal of Public Health. 2018;26(5):551-558.
Tschaftary, A., Hess, N., Hiltner, S., & Oertelt-Prigione, S. (2018). The association between sex, age and health literacy and the uptake of cardiovascular prevention: a cross-sectional analysis in a primary care setting. Journal of Public Health, 26(5), 551-558. https://doi.org/10.1007/s10389-017-0888-y
Tschaftary, Alessa, Hess, Natascha, Hiltner, Sarah, and Oertelt-Prigione, Sabine. 2018. “The association between sex, age and health literacy and the uptake of cardiovascular prevention: a cross-sectional analysis in a primary care setting”. Journal of Public Health 26 (5): 551-558.
Tschaftary, A., Hess, N., Hiltner, S., and Oertelt-Prigione, S. (2018). The association between sex, age and health literacy and the uptake of cardiovascular prevention: a cross-sectional analysis in a primary care setting. Journal of Public Health 26, 551-558.
Tschaftary, A., et al., 2018. The association between sex, age and health literacy and the uptake of cardiovascular prevention: a cross-sectional analysis in a primary care setting. Journal of Public Health, 26(5), p 551-558.
A. Tschaftary, et al., “The association between sex, age and health literacy and the uptake of cardiovascular prevention: a cross-sectional analysis in a primary care setting”, Journal of Public Health, vol. 26, 2018, pp. 551-558.
Tschaftary, A., Hess, N., Hiltner, S., Oertelt-Prigione, S.: The association between sex, age and health literacy and the uptake of cardiovascular prevention: a cross-sectional analysis in a primary care setting. Journal of Public Health. 26, 551-558 (2018).
Tschaftary, Alessa, Hess, Natascha, Hiltner, Sarah, and Oertelt-Prigione, Sabine. “The association between sex, age and health literacy and the uptake of cardiovascular prevention: a cross-sectional analysis in a primary care setting”. Journal of Public Health 26.5 (2018): 551-558.
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