Assessing Cancer Health Literacy among Spanish-Speaking Latinos

被引:0
作者
Margarita Echeverri
David Anderson
Anna María Nápoles
机构
[1] Xavier University of Louisiana,Educational Coordinator Health Disparities, Diversity and Cultural Competence, Center for Minority Health and Health Disparities Research and Education
[2] College of Pharmacy,Department of Mathematics
[3] Xavier University of Louisiana,Department of Medicine, Center for Aging in Diverse Communities
[4] University of California San Francisco,undefined
来源
Journal of Cancer Education | 2018年 / 33卷
关键词
Cancer health literacy; Latinos; Hispanics; Assessment; Psychometric evaluation; Spanish; Assessment tools; Cancer literacy levels;
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
Health literacy is a dynamic construct that changes with specific health conditions; thus, new disease-specific health literacy tools are needed. Since cancer is the leading cause of death among Latinos, the largest and fastest-growing minority population in the nation, there is a need to develop tools to assess cancer health literacy (CHL) among the Spanish-speaking population. The Cancer Health Literacy Test, Spanish version (CHLT-30-DKspa) was applied to identify Spanish-speaking individuals with low CHL and ascertain which items in the tool best discriminate between CHL level groups. Cross-sectional field test of the CHLT-30-DKspa among Spanish-speaking Latinos. Latent class analysis (LCA) identified participants with varying CHL levels. Probability of correct answers, odds ratios, and standardized errors were used to identify the items that allow the classification of individuals among the latent classes. LCA resulted in a three-latent-class model predicting 39.4% of participants to be in the HIGH class, 43.3% in the MEDIUM class, and 17.3% in the LOW class. Eleven items (the CHLT-11-DKspa) meet the criteria to clearly separate participants with HIGH and LOW classes of CHL. Although the best model fit was a three-class solution, results showed a clear separation of individuals from HIGH versus LOW levels of CHL, but separation of those in the MEDIUM level was not as clear. The CHLT-11-DKspa is a shorter measure that may be relatively easy to use in a clinical encounter to identify Spanish-speaking patients with the poorest levels of CHL who may require additional support to understand medical instructions and care plans.
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页码:1333 / 1340
页数:7
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