학술논문

Association between health literacy and self-care behaviors among patients with chronic kidney disease
Document Type
article
Source
BMC Nephrology. 19(1)
Subject
Behavioral and Social Science
Kidney Disease
Prevention
Clinical Research
Renal and urogenital
Good Health and Well Being
Adult
Aged
Cross-Sectional Studies
Female
Health Literacy
Humans
Male
Middle Aged
Pilot Projects
Registries
Renal Insufficiency
Chronic
Retrospective Studies
Self Care
Health literacy
Chronic kidney disease
Self-management support
Self-care
CKD
Clinical Sciences
Urology & Nephrology
Language
Abstract
BackgroundWe explored the association between health literacy and self-care behaviors among low-income patients with chronic kidney disease (CKD).MethodsWe used baseline data from the Kidney Awareness Registry and Education trial (n = 137 patients with CKD) and multivariable logistic regressions to cross-sectionally examine the association between health literacy, defined by a validated questionnaire, and healthy behaviors.ResultsStudy participants had a mean age of 55 years, were racially diverse (6% White, 36% Hispanic, 43% Black, 15% Asian) and 26% had low health literacy. Over one-third (38%) had hypertension, 51% had diabetes, and 67% had CKD stage 3 or 4. Compared to individuals with adequate health literacy, those with low health literacy had non-statistically significant higher tobacco use (adjusted odds ratio [aOR] = 2.33; 95% CI 0.90-6.06) and lower consumption of sugary beverages (aOR = 0.50; 0.20-1.23) and statistically significant decreased fast food intake (aOR = 0.38; 0.16-0.93). Health literacy was not associated with differences in medication adherence (0.84; 0.38-1.89) or physical activity (aOR = 2.39; 0.54-10.53).ConclusionsHealth literacy was not uniformly associated with all self-care behaviors important for CKD management. A more nuanced understanding of the association of health literacy and self-care may be necessary to promote participation in behaviors known to slow CKD progression.