A Qualitative Study of the Development of Health Literacy Capacities of Participants Attending a Community-Based Cardiovascular Health Programme
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Methods
2.1. Study Design
2.2. Participants
2.2.1. Profile of Study Participants
2.2.2. Data Collection Procedures
Interviews
2.3. Data Analysis
- Credibility: Participants’ perspectives were reported as accurately as possible and the participants own voice used. Review and refinement of themes through a consensus among the three authors.
- Triangulation: convergence sought among multiple sources of information (interview transcripts, memos, relevant theory and authors) to verify interview data and to develop themes. A level of member checking achieved where key issues and themes arising at time point 1 were reviewed with the participants at start of time point 2 interviews.
- Transferability: Detailed accounts of the data and the context of data collection provided.
- Descriptive validity: Multiple reading of the transcripts and listening to recordings in line with the methodology of thematic analysis.
- Interpretive validity: Made clear through the use of the participants own voice alongside the meaning attributed by the researcher.
- Theoretical validity: Findings clearly set out within relevant theory in the field of health literacy.
- Researcher reflexivity: Preliminary analysis between time points allowed researcher to reflect on personal assumptions related to health literacy and social contexts.
2.4. Ethical Considerations
3. Results
3.1. Re-Engagement with Health Information
I would have read lots of stuff and you’d hear stuff on the radio about healthy eating and all the rest of it but by actually handing you the packet of cereal that you buy every week and saying if you really look at it; and so it was really, really pertinent to where we were at rather than saying you should eat more of this, eat more of that.(PP4FA)
So we got an awful lot of information the first day we came—where the stroke was—they said it was in the front part of his brain—we didn’t know that from the hospital, you know. … they said it was alright for him to do it (exercise), which was more—do you know we never got that from the hospital really—they never told us like from once he came home.(PP23FL)
Because the books are great but then when you’ve somebody to talk you through it as well it’s good.(P1FL)
Yes, I would, I’d find it easier alright now to kind of eliminate down and say well, yeah, now that is a thing that I really need to look into a bit more.(P5FL)
3.2. Increased Understanding of Risk and Protective Factors
3.2.1. Food and Nutrition
Like checking out labels and food products and what’s in some of the regular everyday foods that we just take for granted and don’t even give a second thought to. Maybe sweet foods or not foods that you’d imagine would have sugars and fats and stuff in them.(P5FL)
They have it down as sodium or they have it down as something else and you’re like, these are all the hidden things like. Then like the sugar, the way they have it under syrup or corn syrup or under; it can be under different names, just little things.(P1FL)
3.2.2. Medication Use and Managing Side Effects
Just that there are different medications for the blood pressure and you don’t have to stop at one; sometimes they combine two different things that you need, like two different tablets.(P1FL)
Like I think because my own mam and dad, they were on loads of medication so as kids it was like medication would fix you and I think since here it’s like why not prevent it before you get to the stage of medication …(P1FL)
I opted not to take (a statin) because I had read things about it… you know, I kind of feel I’ve gone from never taking anything to suddenly taking medication, you know… Yeah, I am always aware that I have responsibility but I will listen to research but I will also ask the question because I do, you know.(P8FL)
Well I started off with having high cholesterol and it was 7 this time last year and we had that conversation about statins and I wouldn’t go on them and I went on my broccoli and my kale and it’s down now to, presently, to 5.5 so I’m happy the way it’s going. If I can keep bringing it down now it’ll be great.(P12FL)
I’m off a lot of tablets I used to be on—a lot of my diabetic tablets that I was on have been more than halved.(P13MA)
So it’s great that way and that way you can pass it on hopefully because I don’t have to take my blood pressure tablets any more.(P1FL)
3.3. Changes in Interactions with HCP
Just like when we were talking about blood pressure I was like, I know how it is. … Yeah, because I’d know more about it, I’d be able to say well this, that or the other. I’d be able to say no and isn’t this that and he’d be like, yeah, I’d be more comfortable about it because then I’d know what I’m talking about.(P1FL)
Probably because I’m not just dealing with my own GP, there are other influences and I can kind of, and other people that I’ve got contact with here and I suppose that can sort of say well this has been said and what do you think? That to me I think is important because you know sometimes you do feel you’re at the mercy sometimes of, you know, if you’re just dealing with one person. …. I mean, that was the good thing of this, I kind of feel now I’ve got more than one area to pull on.(P8FL)
I suppose the reinforcement by the people here from what my GP was saying, you know, when you’re dealing with one person I was able to kind of say to him ‘can you leave me another month?’ But they were very definite here, ‘oh you actually need your medications increased.’ So it was reinforced in two places. It was very definite, and I kind of knew they were right, you know.(P21FL)
GPs are very busy, you know, you have so many things when you go in I feel of the medical type … but really you are conscious that they are so busy and there is so many more waiting to come in, that, no, you know, I don’t think it’s a good place to sort out feelings.(P21FL)
I was probably more relaxed this time than I would have been normally and I probably wouldn’t, I probably allowed my GP to just get on with the job herself as opposed to interrogating the poor woman … and at the same time, for example, I suppose I would have been less anxious in many ways; that would be an indication of me being more willing to trust that things are probably alright but no harm to check things out.(P2FA)
3.4. Enhanced Psychological Insights
3.4.1. Perceptions of Control and Self-Efficacy
Everything was kind of against me. I remember at one of the meetings now alright and what they kind of said to me well at least like, you’re not in a great place but at least if you’re doing something about it, you know, you should feel that bit better in yourself. You’re trying to improve some of the situation anyway.(P5FL)
Maybe with them telling you and explaining to you that I suppose every point you come down in something or every month you’re doing something that it sort of helps you along the way.(P5FL)
You see, I suppose for myself, you know, when you’re busy, you’re working you don’t, I just didn’t think about my health, you know. I’m realising because I’ve had a lot go on in the last while, if I want to live healthily and I suppose now too when I’m retired; I think when you’re working sometimes you don’t have so much control but now that I’ve retired I think my attitude has changed.(P8FL)
I let stress develop, it was like a cancer, it was eating away at me. So in the last few weeks I’ve started letting it go completely over my head, positive things have come out of it, you know. I’m totally relaxed, totally chilled out, which I wasn’t, and maybe that’s why my blood pressure was away, you know.(P13MA)
I can control my amount of exercise and diet, certain things you can control, but there are certain things you can’t in life. You know like your situation. Or if you wanted to go and live somewhere else, or live alone, or not having the stress of this that or the other, then there is some things you can’t control, you know, financially and that kind of thing.(P21FL)
I never was in a gym, I never used a gym before, or exercised with other people, or that kind of thing—I never realised how good you can feel after! I didn’t know that! I feel a bit braver. It made me feel, you know, that I could do it, and it’s nice to exercise.(P21FL)
I feel that I have enough information about my illness, my sickness, I wouldn’t call it an illness either, but my health, that I feel I’m in safe hands. And if I reduced my chances of getting a stroke by 20 percent in 12 weeks, what can I do in another [12 weeks]? Like, they wanted to get my blood, my heartbeat up to a certain thing, and they’ve done that.(P20FA)
3.4.2. Anxiety and Fears
How do I put it? Like when the stroke came I didn’t know what I knew anymore, or what, because he was such an unlikely candidate of getting a stroke.(PP23FL)
So I just, I think I have a kind of a, I feel more confident that I’m not as bad as I thought I was, and that I know like that I can live a good life. I can look forward, I look forward now like to a better kind of a life for myself.(P20FA)
This participant was now able to reflect with a more positive outlook, which she attributed to staff reassurance:The symptoms that I presented with, were sort of symptoms that would be relevant to a mini stroke. And that sort of made me afraid. That if I take a long journey in the car or should, should I do this, should I do that, will I get more symptoms, will I get a stroke? That, it knocked my confidence.(P15FA)
And they were all (saying) you know that might never happen again and your blood pressure is being monitored and your heart checks and cholesterol and diet … it takes a while to readjust … I’m smiling now and all that, but it did throw me … But I’ve come out the other end now and I’m ok.(P15FA)
And doing a bit more. But I’m not as nervous now about, say, taking off and doing more things by myself. Just up to the gym and keep doing it, and I knew that I could then, you know.(P21FL)
3.5. Understanding of Broader Determinants of Health
3.5.1. Physical Contexts
Walking—Access and Road Safety Issues
Just somewhere for people to be able to go out walking that’s safe, just a little footpath just for maybe three miles say and then everybody can go, because like it’s there, it’s safe. Women can bring their buggies, kids can go on bikes.(P1FL)
Similarly, from another participant:So like there’s loads of walkways and people are more motivated up there. You look out the window, every three seconds there’s somebody walking by; always movement, people are running or cycling or something but back in our place all you see is cars. It’s a different place … It would be great for everywhere because I know, say cities have it all but out in the country there’s really nothing.(P1FL)
Paths would make lives better for people, a lot easier. So if you were walking with a child in a pram you just couldn’t do it you know. And I mean an elderly person, my mother has one of those wheelers, she can’t walk. Those little things would make life a lot easier you know.(P8FL)
But the effort of getting into a car and driving, you just won’t do that, whereas where we are we don’t have that excuse. We do not need to get into the car to go to somewhere specific to do exercise.(P4FA)
I actually love where I live, in that I’m beside a big green, I’m beside a big park, so I can walk, in five minutes from my house I can walk in a big field, and it’s half a mile we’ll say one way and the other, I can have a half mile to a mile walk. And that really is important to me. Or I can go down to a beach. And that is really a lifeline for me, being able to live where I’m living. So I think that really has an impact on your health, if you have somewhere nice to walk, I think, it’s really important.(P21FL)
Cycling
Once you go outside the city area back on the country roads like I’d be nervous enough now cycling. It would make it safer. Because you are taking your life in your hands if you get up on a bike…the traffic is too busy. So from that point of view I would like to see something being done.(P16ML)
Food Culture/Food Manufacturing
Another participant commented on the role of policy with regard to childhood obesity.I think they’d want to get that system brought in for all food manufacturers. But there would be too much opposition from the ones who have the bad food. So there’s a stalemate there. So it’s up to the government to bring it in by law and that’s the only way it can happen. If they bring it in by law then they’re compelled to put that red label on and put their product, whether it’s red, amber or green.(P3ML)
I would be very bothered about this new idea in the schools that they’ve a ‘no running’ policy now in 1 in 20 schools in the country. I think that’s where it needs to start with the health. Now I know they do some of these sports things and that, but there should be an awful lot more. They’re talking about having a sugar tax but then on the soft drinks and that but I think there should be a tax like cigarettes, you know, because it’s ridiculous.(PP4FA)
Role of Government
Another commented on a lack of long-term health promotion planning at government level.So I sent that in and wrote all my own views on it and the list of complaints that I have, all the heart problems I have, the liver and so on. And then the list of all the drugs I have. In other words I pay the maximum of, it’s over 1700 a year even with the allowance the government make, that’s what it works out at. And I’m retired so you know I’d appreciate it if the government were to do that; give me a medical card for the drugs. So that’s the one way I can appeal to the government.(P3ML)
And the other thing is that they’re putting in a whole load of wind farms, which is fine and I’m in favour of wind farms and alternative energy, but our carbon footprint would go way down if we actually cycled in the places that we can cycle. So I think there’s very little joined-up thinking in terms of health promotion.(P2FA)
Sharing Information
So there’s little bits here and there, even just me in the class here; I’m passing it along because there’s 13 of us so I’m passing it on to them and their wives and their kids. So there’s a whole bundle of people out there that’s getting the information as well. Even the booklets that I get here I pass them on there and they’re all reading them. Some things they might change, some they mightn’t. You know that they are trying themselves as well because like a few of us started doing a few changes and you see them doing it as well; even like there’s a few of my brothers and they’ve given up salt altogether.(P1FL)
I do especially say to immediate family. I did, I spoke to my niece about it, I spoke to my sister. I’m very much a kind of pass it on, I think that’s important. The more people who know, you know … Passing it on, kind of giving people, say my sister, both sisters actually and also my sister’s partner because he had a stent put in; I suppose I rang him then just this week and said are you aware that you really should have a blood test on a regular basis; well he was but he hadn’t, so that kind of thing.(P8FL)
I’ve a young lad there, he’s seven, he comes in [saying,] ‘Granddad, I’m starving.’ I say, ‘go to the fridge there and get something for yourself.’ And he’ll pick the fruit and he’ll eat it, whereas if it wasn’t there he’d be looking for Tayto (crisps) or something like that.(P16ML)
But there isn’t as much around for them [grandchildren], there’s no biscuits around or anything like that. Yeah. And I thought first that we’d try it—I thought it wouldn’t last—but now it’s nearly normal, do you know, that we don’t have it.(PP23FL)
4. Discussion
4.1. Strengths
4.2. Limitations
5. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
Appendix A. Interview Guide
- How would you describe your experience of taking part in the programme (a structured CVD risk reduction and health promotion course)?
- Can you tell me about how you have been getting information about your health/health issues in general since we last met?
- How has your understanding changed in relation to your own health situation/relation to health issues in general?
- Have you learnt anything that makes it easier to make judgements on what information is useful and what is not? How have you done this?
- Tell me about how you have used any information from the course? What has helped/hindered this process?
- Can you tell me about your understanding of health and well-being issues in general?
- If it were possible to make any changes in your own neighbourhood, what might you do to make it more health promoting for yourself/your community?
- Can you tell me what changes you see or feel in yourself as a result of participating in the programme?
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Time Points | Sample | Methods |
---|---|---|
Phase 1: (Baseline: Beginning of programme) | 26 Participants | HLS-EU survey and interview completed [21] |
Phase 2: (End of programme @12 weeks) | 19 Participants | Interview completed |
Phase 3: (One-year follow-up @12 months) | 17 Participants | HLS-EU survey and interview completed [21] |
Participants (n) | 19 |
---|---|
Gender | n, % |
Male | 8 (42%) |
Female | 11 (58%) |
Age (mean, range) | 61 (36–76) |
Education: highest level attained to date | n, % |
Primary School | 4 (21%) |
Secondary School | 10 (53%) |
Diploma/certificate/Primary degree/postgraduate | 5 (26%) |
Social class 1 | n, % |
I–II (High) | 6 (32%) |
III–IV (Medium) | 1 (5%) |
V–VII (Low) | 12 (63%) |
General health literacy level from HLS-EU measure 2 | n, % |
Limited | 13 (68%) |
Adequate | 6 (32%) |
Length of time with risk factors/illness | n, % |
6–9 months | 7 (37%) |
More than 1 year | 12 (63%) |
Health service access | n, % |
Private health insurance | 10 (53%) |
Medical card only 3 | 7 (37%) |
Private AND medical card | 2 (10%) |
Framing Questions (5) |
What is different from one round of data to the next? |
When do changes occur? |
What contextual and intervening conditions appear to influence and affect participant changes over time? |
What are the dynamics of participant changes over time? |
What preliminary assertions about participant changes can be made as the data analysis progresses? |
Descriptive Qs (7) |
What increases/emerges over time? |
What is cumulative? |
What kinds of surges/epiphanies occur? |
What decreases/ceases over time? |
What remains constant or consistent? |
What is idiosyncratic? |
What is missing? |
Analytic and interpretive questions (4) |
What changes are interrelated? |
What changes oppose or harmonise with natural human development or constructed social processes? |
What are participant or conceptual rhythms, e.g., cycles through time? |
What is the through-line of the study? |
Theme | Health Literacy (HL) Level | Subtheme | Categories |
---|---|---|---|
Re-engagement with health information | Changes in functional HL | Qualities of communicator Forum/methods | Engaging Supportive Multiple methods used |
Increased understanding of risk and protective factors | Changes in functional HL | Food and nutrition Exercise Medication and treatments Side-effects of medication Cholesterol Blood Pressure | |
Changes in interactions with healthcare providers (HCP) | Changes in interactive HL | More at ease in communicating with the HCP Reinforcement/reassurances | Increased knowledge and therefore confidence |
Enhanced psychological insights | Changes in critical HL | Increased insights of personal control limits and opportunities | Self-efficacy and confidence Dealing with stress |
Emotional issues Facilitators of motivation | Anxiety/fear Peer comparisons | ||
Understanding the broader determinants of health changes in critical health literacy | Changes in critical HL | Sharing information Infrastructures to support health | Safe access—walkways, cycling Food manufacturing/culture Government lobbying |
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McKenna, V.B.; Sixsmith, J.; Barry, M.M. A Qualitative Study of the Development of Health Literacy Capacities of Participants Attending a Community-Based Cardiovascular Health Programme. Int. J. Environ. Res. Public Health 2018, 15, 1157. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph15061157
McKenna VB, Sixsmith J, Barry MM. A Qualitative Study of the Development of Health Literacy Capacities of Participants Attending a Community-Based Cardiovascular Health Programme. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health. 2018; 15(6):1157. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph15061157
Chicago/Turabian StyleMcKenna, Verna B., Jane Sixsmith, and Margaret M. Barry. 2018. "A Qualitative Study of the Development of Health Literacy Capacities of Participants Attending a Community-Based Cardiovascular Health Programme" International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health 15, no. 6: 1157. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph15061157
APA StyleMcKenna, V. B., Sixsmith, J., & Barry, M. M. (2018). A Qualitative Study of the Development of Health Literacy Capacities of Participants Attending a Community-Based Cardiovascular Health Programme. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health, 15(6), 1157. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph15061157