Measuring Health Literacy in Primary Healthcare: Adaptation and Validation of a French-Language Version of the Brief Health Literacy Screening among Patients with Chronic Conditions Seen in Primary Care
Abstract
:1. Background
2. Methods
2.1. Transcultural Adaptation
2.2. Validation Study
2.2.1. Participants
2.2.2. Measure
- Sociodemographic questions on gender, marital status, education, occupation, and income;
- Health Literacy Questionnaire (HLQ) used to measure health literacy that is frequently used in research settings [40,41]. The following subscales were selected to assess the concurrent validity because they covered the same dimensions as the BHLS questions: having sufficient information to manage one’s health (range from 1 to 4), ability to find good health information (range from 1 to 5), and understanding health information well enough to know what to do (range from 1 to 5). For the HLQ, a higher score means better health literacy;
- BHLS [29] contains three items addressing, namely, help with reading, confidence with forms, and problems with learning. It uses a five-point Likert-type scale that varies according to the questions: Questions 1 and 2: 1 “all of the time”; 2 “most of the time”; 3 “some of the time”; 4 “a little of the time”; 5 “none of the time”. Question 3: 5 “extremely”; 4 “quite a bit”; 3 “somewhat”; 2 “a little bit”; 1 “not at all”. The total score varied from 3 “highest problem” to 15 “no problem” related to health literacy.
2.2.3. Data Analysis
2.3. Ethics Approval
3. Results
3.1. Translation, Back Translation, and Evaluation Committee
3.2. Pre-Test
3.3. Validation Study
4. Discussion
Strengths and Limitations of the Study
5. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
Abbreviations
References
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Step | Description |
---|---|
Translation | The original English version was translated into French by a native French-speaking professional translator. |
Back translation | The French version was translated back into English by a native English-speaking professional translator who did not see the original English version. |
Translation evaluation committee | Both English versions, the original and the back-translated version, were compared by an expert group composed of two translators, one bilingual patient, and five members of the research team (MCC, CH, ML, ÉH, and EMC, four of them being healthcare providers). The aim was to identify any discrepancies between the versions to verify that the meaning was preserved in the translated French version. |
Cognitive testing | A 30–45 min cognitive interview based on the Think Aloud Method [37] was administered to 10 patients with chronic conditions by a member of the research team (ÉH) to evaluate the validity of the translated French version of the questionnaire. Each patient was asked to read each question aloud and provide feedback on what they thought of it. The research team then examined problematic terms and modified them to improve patient understanding. Once patients no longer had difficulty completing the questionnaire, the final translated French version was prepared. |
Validation of the French-language version | The final translated French version was completed by patients with chronic conditions seen in primary care. Internal consistency, test–retest reliability, and concurrent validity were evaluated. See details in the Validation study section. |
BHLS | BHLS-FCv |
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Characteristics | n = 178 | n = 47 * |
---|---|---|
Age (in years): mean (SD) | 59 (15.8) | 58.8 (15.3) |
Number of conditions: mean (SD) | 4.2 (2.3) | 4.3 (2.0) |
Female: n (%) | 117 (65.7) | 29 (61.7) |
Education completed: n (%); 6 missing | ||
Less than high school | 40 (23.3) | 9 (19.1) |
Completed high school | 51 (29.7) | 9 (19.1) |
College or post-secondary institution | 44 (25.6) | 15 (31.9) |
University | 37 (21.5) | 12 (25.5) |
Occupation: n (%); 6 missing | ||
Employed | 57 (33.1) | 16 (34.0) |
Unemployed | 27 (15.7) | 3 (6.4) |
Retired | 85 (49.4) | 26 (55.3) |
Other | 3 (1.7) | 1 (2.1) |
Annual household income (in CAN$): n (%); 7 missing | ||
Less than CAN 20,000 | 23 (13.5) | 3 (6.4) |
CAN 20,000 to 49,999 | 68 (39.7) | 22 (46.8) |
CAN 50,000 or more | 80 (46.8) | 20 (42.6) |
Marital status: n (%); 1 missing | ||
Married, living with a partner | 99 (55.9) | 24 (51.1) |
Separated, divorced | 28 (15.8) | 10 (21.3) |
Widowed | 23 (13.0) | 3 (6.4) |
Single | 27 (15.3) | 10 (21.3) |
Mean Score (Min–Max) | Internal Consistency, Cronbach’s Alpha | Test–Retest Reliability, ICC (95% CI) | |
---|---|---|---|
T1 (n = 178) | 13.3 (3–15) | 0.77 | 0.69 (0.45–0.83) |
T2 (n = 47) | 13.1 (6–15) | 0.79 |
HLQ Subscales | Concurrent Validity, Spearman’s Correlation |
---|---|
Having sufficient information to manage my health | 0.28 * |
Ability to find good health information | 0.42 * |
Understanding health information well enough to know what to do | 0.58 * |
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Chouinard, M.-C.; Lambert, M.; Lavoie, M.; Lambert, S.D.; Hudon, É.; Dumont-Samson, O.; Hudon, C. Measuring Health Literacy in Primary Healthcare: Adaptation and Validation of a French-Language Version of the Brief Health Literacy Screening among Patients with Chronic Conditions Seen in Primary Care. Int. J. Environ. Res. Public Health 2022, 19, 7669. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph19137669
Chouinard M-C, Lambert M, Lavoie M, Lambert SD, Hudon É, Dumont-Samson O, Hudon C. Measuring Health Literacy in Primary Healthcare: Adaptation and Validation of a French-Language Version of the Brief Health Literacy Screening among Patients with Chronic Conditions Seen in Primary Care. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health. 2022; 19(13):7669. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph19137669
Chicago/Turabian StyleChouinard, Maud-Christine, Mireille Lambert, Mélissa Lavoie, Sylvie D. Lambert, Émilie Hudon, Olivier Dumont-Samson, and Catherine Hudon. 2022. "Measuring Health Literacy in Primary Healthcare: Adaptation and Validation of a French-Language Version of the Brief Health Literacy Screening among Patients with Chronic Conditions Seen in Primary Care" International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health 19, no. 13: 7669. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph19137669
APA StyleChouinard, M. -C., Lambert, M., Lavoie, M., Lambert, S. D., Hudon, É., Dumont-Samson, O., & Hudon, C. (2022). Measuring Health Literacy in Primary Healthcare: Adaptation and Validation of a French-Language Version of the Brief Health Literacy Screening among Patients with Chronic Conditions Seen in Primary Care. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health, 19(13), 7669. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph19137669