Title of article :
Assessment of Health Literacy and Numeracy Among Spanish-Speaking Parents of Young Children: Validation of the Spanish Parental Health Literacy Activities Test (PHLAT Spanish)
Author/Authors :
Yin، نويسنده , , H. Shonna and Sanders، نويسنده , , Lee M. and Rothman، نويسنده , , Russell L. and Mendelsohn، نويسنده , , Alan L. and Dreyer، نويسنده , , Benard P. and White، نويسنده , , Richard O. and Finkle، نويسنده , , Joanne P. and Prendes، نويسنده , , Stefania and Perrin، نويسنده , , Eliana M.، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2012
Pages :
7
From page :
68
To page :
74
Abstract :
Objective ess the health literacy and numeracy skills of Spanish-speaking parents of young children and to validate a new Spanish language health literacy assessment for parents, the Spanish Parental Health Literacy Activities Test (PHLAT Spanish). s sectional study of Spanish-speaking caregivers of young children (<30 months) enrolled at primary care clinics in 4 academic medical centers. Caregivers were administered the 10-item PHLAT in addition to validated tests of health literacy (S-TOFHLA) and numeracy (WRAT-3 Arithmetic). Psychometric analysis was used to examine item characteristics of the PHLAT-10 Spanish, to assess its correlation with sociodemographics and performance on literacy/numeracy assessments, and to generate a shorter 8-item scale (PHLAT-8). s caregivers, 77% had adequate health literacy (S-TOFHLA), whereas only 0.6% had 9th grade or greater numeracy skills. Mean PHLAT-10 score was 41.6% (SD 21.1). Fewer than one-half (45.5%) were able to read a liquid antibiotic prescription label and demonstrate how much medication to administer within an oral syringe. Less than one-third (31.8%) were able to interpret a food label to determine whether it met WIC (Special supplemental nutrition program for Women, Infants, and Children) guidelines. Greater PHLAT-10 score was associated with greater years of education (r = 0.49), S-TOFHLA (r = 0.53), and WRAT-3 (r = 0.55) scores (P < .001). Internal reliability was good (Kuder-Richardson coefficient of reliability; KR-20 = 0.61). An 8-item scale was highly correlated with the full 10-item scale (r = 0.97, P < .001), with comparable internal reliability (KR-20 = 0.64). sions panish-speaking parents have difficulty performing health-related literacy and numeracy tasks. The Spanish PHLAT demonstrates good psychometric characteristics and may be useful for identifying parents who would benefit from receiving low-literacy child health information.
Keywords :
anticipatory guidance , infants , parenting skills , health literacy
Journal title :
Academic Pediatrics
Serial Year :
2012
Journal title :
Academic Pediatrics
Record number :
1746144
Link To Document :
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