Investigation of Health Literacy Status in Beijing, China

Background: The Chinese government uses health literacy as an evaluation to estimate population health status in national strategic planning. A health literacy survey system for the city of Beijing, China was established in 2012 with triennial surveys to obtain representative data for the whole city...

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Main Authors: Jianhui Shi, Li Qi, Yuqing Li, Xiurong Liu
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: SLACK Incorporated 2020-09-01
Series:Health Literacy Research and Practice
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.healio.com/public-health/journals/hlrp/2020-7-4-3/%7B289ddd40-0d64-4f41-9015-cd58da1d055b%7D/investigation-of-health-literacy-status-in-beijing-china
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spelling doaj-8950399fcdd64ca7a725262b0a4c297a2020-11-25T03:22:07ZengSLACK IncorporatedHealth Literacy Research and Practice2474-83072020-09-0143e174e18410.3928/24748307-20200731-01Investigation of Health Literacy Status in Beijing, ChinaJianhui ShiLi QiYuqing LiXiurong LiuBackground: The Chinese government uses health literacy as an evaluation to estimate population health status in national strategic planning. A health literacy survey system for the city of Beijing, China was established in 2012 with triennial surveys to obtain representative data for the whole city. Objective: The objective of this study was to examine results of the 2015 Beijing Health Literacy Survey and to identify population subgroups that may warrant intervention due to high risk for not having adequate health literacy. Methods: This was a cross-sectional study in which participants were selected by multistage stratified cluster sampling. The information was collected in 2015 in face-to-face interviews on the Chinese Citizen Health Literacy Questionnaire. A total of 12,876 interviews were included in the final analyses. Weighting was conducted in all statistical analyses to obtain representative estimates, and multiple logistic regression was applied to examine the independent influencing factors on health literacy level (adequate/inadequate). Key Results: Overall, 28% of participants had adequate health literacy. Urban residents had a higher proportion of participants with adequate health literacy compared to rural residents (29.5% vs. 19%, p < .01). Women (29.7%) had a higher proportion of participants with adequate health literacy compared to men (29.7% vs. 26.4%, p < .01). The proportion of participants with adequate health literacy was significantly different among age groups (χ2 = 332.9, p < .01). Residents age 25 to 34 years had the highest rate of adequate health literacy (33.9%). The proportion of participants with adequate health literacy increased as participants obtained more education (χ2 = 818.4, p < .01). Residents in households with higher income had a higher rate of adequate health literacy (χ2 = 462.4, p < .01). Gender, age, education, and household income were independently associated with the level of health literacy. Conclusions: Substantial variation exists in health literacy level among age groups, gender groups, and education groups. Taking these disparities into account is important when developing health policies and allocating resources.https://www.healio.com/public-health/journals/hlrp/2020-7-4-3/%7B289ddd40-0d64-4f41-9015-cd58da1d055b%7D/investigation-of-health-literacy-status-in-beijing-chinahealth literacychinabeijingchinese citizen health literacy questionnaire
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Jianhui Shi
Li Qi
Yuqing Li
Xiurong Liu
spellingShingle Jianhui Shi
Li Qi
Yuqing Li
Xiurong Liu
Investigation of Health Literacy Status in Beijing, China
Health Literacy Research and Practice
health literacy
china
beijing
chinese citizen health literacy questionnaire
author_facet Jianhui Shi
Li Qi
Yuqing Li
Xiurong Liu
author_sort Jianhui Shi
title Investigation of Health Literacy Status in Beijing, China
title_short Investigation of Health Literacy Status in Beijing, China
title_full Investigation of Health Literacy Status in Beijing, China
title_fullStr Investigation of Health Literacy Status in Beijing, China
title_full_unstemmed Investigation of Health Literacy Status in Beijing, China
title_sort investigation of health literacy status in beijing, china
publisher SLACK Incorporated
series Health Literacy Research and Practice
issn 2474-8307
publishDate 2020-09-01
description Background: The Chinese government uses health literacy as an evaluation to estimate population health status in national strategic planning. A health literacy survey system for the city of Beijing, China was established in 2012 with triennial surveys to obtain representative data for the whole city. Objective: The objective of this study was to examine results of the 2015 Beijing Health Literacy Survey and to identify population subgroups that may warrant intervention due to high risk for not having adequate health literacy. Methods: This was a cross-sectional study in which participants were selected by multistage stratified cluster sampling. The information was collected in 2015 in face-to-face interviews on the Chinese Citizen Health Literacy Questionnaire. A total of 12,876 interviews were included in the final analyses. Weighting was conducted in all statistical analyses to obtain representative estimates, and multiple logistic regression was applied to examine the independent influencing factors on health literacy level (adequate/inadequate). Key Results: Overall, 28% of participants had adequate health literacy. Urban residents had a higher proportion of participants with adequate health literacy compared to rural residents (29.5% vs. 19%, p < .01). Women (29.7%) had a higher proportion of participants with adequate health literacy compared to men (29.7% vs. 26.4%, p < .01). The proportion of participants with adequate health literacy was significantly different among age groups (χ2 = 332.9, p < .01). Residents age 25 to 34 years had the highest rate of adequate health literacy (33.9%). The proportion of participants with adequate health literacy increased as participants obtained more education (χ2 = 818.4, p < .01). Residents in households with higher income had a higher rate of adequate health literacy (χ2 = 462.4, p < .01). Gender, age, education, and household income were independently associated with the level of health literacy. Conclusions: Substantial variation exists in health literacy level among age groups, gender groups, and education groups. Taking these disparities into account is important when developing health policies and allocating resources.
topic health literacy
china
beijing
chinese citizen health literacy questionnaire
url https://www.healio.com/public-health/journals/hlrp/2020-7-4-3/%7B289ddd40-0d64-4f41-9015-cd58da1d055b%7D/investigation-of-health-literacy-status-in-beijing-china
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