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Linking Health Literacy to Self-Care in Hypertensive Patients with Physical Disabilities: A Path Analysis Using a Multi-Mediation Model.

Hye Jin NamJu Young Yoon
Published in: International journal of environmental research and public health (2021)
Hypertension has been identified as the most prevalent chronic disease, accounting for the majority of premature deaths in people with physical disability in South Korea. Self-care is vital in controlling high blood pressure. Health literacy has been implicated in self-care behaviors; however, the mechanisms behind this relationship remain unclear. Therefore, the present study aimed to test a hypothetical path model estimating the association between health literacy and hypertension self-care behaviors and to verify the mediating effects of access to healthcare, provider-patient interactions, hypertension knowledge, and hypertension control self-efficacy in hypertensive people with physical disability. In total, 211 hypertensive adults with physical disability completed an online survey. A path analysis using a multi-mediation model was performed using AMOS 17.0 (IBM SPSS Inc., Chicago, IL, USA), and indirect effects were estimated using phantom variables. As a result, the model fit indices were deemed excellent. Significant indirect pathways were determined from health literacy to hypertension self-care behavior via provider-patient interactions, knowledge, and self-efficacy, although no direct association was found between health literacy and self-care behaviors. The study findings supported the importance of provider-patient interactions, knowledge, and self-efficacy, which play a role in linking health literacy and self-care behavior in hypertensive patients with physical disability.
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