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Health literacy and uptake of anti-fracture medications in a population-based sample of Australian women

Version 2 2024-06-04, 13:57
Version 1 2018-05-29, 11:44
journal contribution
posted on 2024-06-04, 13:57 authored by Sarah HoskingSarah Hosking, SL Brennan-Olsen, A Beauchamp, R Buchbinder, Lana WilliamsLana Williams, Julie PascoJulie Pasco
This study investigated associations between health literacy and use of anti-fracture medications in women with osteoporosis. Data were collected for women participating in the population-based Geelong Osteoporosis Study in Australia. Health literacy was ascertained using the Health Literacy Questionnaire (HLQ) and bone mineral density by dual x-ray absorptiometry. Self-reported current medications were classified using MIMS codes, with the category 'Agent affecting calcium and bone metabolism' indicating osteoporosis treatment. Analysis of Variance (p-value <0.1 indicating a trend) and Cohen's d effect sizes (ES [95%CI]) (categorised; Small >0.2-<0.5, Moderate >0.5-0.8, Large >0.8) were calculated for differences in HLQ scale scores between participants who did vs. did not self-report medication use. Among 620 women, 134 (21.6%) had osteoporosis, 14 (10.5%) of whom self-reported current anti-fracture medication use. Small/moderate ES indicated women taking medication had lower HLQ scores in scales 'Navigating the healthcare system', 'Ability to find health information' and 'Understand health information' (ES 0.36 [0.25-0.79], 0.41 [0.29-0.87] and 0.64 [0.54-1.03], respectively). A trend was observed (p = 0.09) for 'Understand health information' scale scores and utilisation of medication. These data suggest women with less confidence in their ability to find and understand health information may follow healthcare provider recommendations and utilise anti-fracture medications more readily.

History

Journal

Research in Social and Administrative Pharmacy

Volume

14

Pagination

846-850

Location

United States

ISSN

1551-7411

eISSN

1934-8150

Language

English

Publication classification

C1 Refereed article in a scholarly journal

Copyright notice

2018, Elsevier

Issue

9

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCIENCE INC