Artigo Revisado por pares

An empirical test of the Health Empowerment Model: Does patient empowerment moderate the effect of health literacy on health status?

2017; Elsevier BV; Volume: 101; Issue: 3 Linguagem: Inglês

10.1016/j.pec.2017.09.004

ISSN

1873-5134

Autores

Lilla Náfrádi, Kent Nakamoto, Márta Csabai, Orsolya Papp-Zipernovszky, Peter J. Schulz,

Tópico(s)

Community Health and Development

Resumo

The Health Empowerment Model (Schulz & Nakamoto, 2013) advocates that the effects of health literacy and empowerment are intertwined on health outcomes. This study aims to test this assumption in the context of health status as a patient outcome.A cross-sectional study was conducted with a sample of 302 participants between June and December 2015. The participants' health literacy (using the NVS and S-TOFHLA tests), empowerment and self-reported health status were assessed.The participants having a high level of patient empowerment and concurrent adequate health literacy (the so-called 'effective self-managers') reported better health status compared to patients who had either lower health literacy and/or lower empowerment scores (P<0.05). Moreover, the meaningfulness (b=0.053, t(297)=2.29, P=0.02) and competence (b=0.07, t(297)=2.47, P=0.01) sub-dimensions of patient empowerment moderated the effect of the NVS on current health status.The study provides evidence for the independence of health literacy and empowerment and partial evidence for their interaction predicting health status.Our findings highlight that health literacy and patient empowerment (in particular its competence and meaningfulness sub-facets) are crucial patient-related variables, to be taken into consideration simultaneously, during screening and health promotion campaigns fostering health status in the general population.

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