Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
6152433 Patient Education and Counseling 2016 8 Pages PDF
Abstract

•Examined correlational and intervention studies of health literacy-adherence relationship.•Health literacy positively associated with adherence to non-medication regimens.•Health literacy positively associated with adherence in cardiovascular disease patients.•Health literacy interventions increased patients health literacy and treatment adherence.•First meta-analysis to suggest directionality of health literacy-adherence relationship.

ObjectiveTo use meta-analytic techniques to assess average effect sizes in studies of: (1) the correlation between patient health literacy and both medication and non-medication adherence, and (2) the efficacy of health literacy interventions on improving health literacy and treatment adherence.MethodsPsychINFO and PubMed databases were searched (1948-2012). A total of 220 published articles met the criteria for inclusion; effect sizes were extracted and articles were coded for moderators.ResultsHealth literacy was positively associated with adherence (r = 0.14), and this association was significantly higher among non-medication regimens and in samples with cardiovascular disease. Health literacy interventions increased both health literacy (r = 0.22) and adherence outcomes (r = 0.16). Moderator analyses revealed greater intervention efficacy when health literacy and adherence were assessed using subjective measures compared to objective measures. Health literacy interventions had a greater effect on adherence in samples of lower income and of racial-ethnic minority patients than in non-minority and higher income samples.ConclusionThis is the first study to synthesize both correlational and intervention studies examining the relationship between health literacy and adherence to both medication and non-medication regimens.ImplicationsThese findings demonstrate the importance of health literacy and the efficacy of health literacy interventions especially among more vulnerable patient groups.

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