Health Literacy in Parents of Children Newly Diagnosed With Cancer and Comprehension of Key Concepts Related to Their Child's Care.
K Elizabeth KeithAman WadhwaJocelyn YorkPariya L FazeliSmita BhatiaWendy LandierPublished in: Journal of pediatric hematology/oncology nursing (2023)
Background: There is a paucity of literature regarding health literacy in pediatric oncology. We sought to understand the relationship between health literacy and comprehension of key new diagnosis education concepts in parents of children newly diagnosed with cancer. Methods: Using data from a study evaluating a structured new diagnosis discharge teaching intervention, we performed a secondary analysis to understand the relationship between parental health literacy (Brief Health Literacy Screener: BHLS) and comprehension of six key concepts (child's diagnosis, primary oncologist, and treatment plan; seeking emergent care; fever definition; re-dosing medication). We also evaluated the association between parents self-reported sociodemographic characteristics, preferred learning style (one-item ordinal assessment) and health literacy. We tested relationships using Fisher's exact tests, independent samples t -tests, and Pearson correlations. Results: Fifty parents participated (age 35.4 ± 8.2 years [ M ± SD ]; 86% female; 60% non-Hispanic white; 24% with ≤high school education); nine parents (18%) scored in the BHLS low literacy range; 80% correctly responded to all six items on the key concepts questionnaire (100% comprehension). Health literacy was not significantly related to 100% comprehension or to individual key concept responses, with the exception of "child's treatment plan" (correct responses: 55.6% in low vs. 100% in adequate literacy groups; p < .001). Parental sociodemographic characteristics and preferred learning styles were not significantly related to health literacy. Discussion: Despite variability in health literacy levels, 80% of the parents comprehended all key concepts, suggesting that the intervention was effective for most parents, regardless of health literacy level.
Keyphrases
- health information
- healthcare
- newly diagnosed
- mental health
- palliative care
- social media
- randomized controlled trial
- systematic review
- young adults
- papillary thyroid
- cross sectional
- pain management
- electronic health record
- squamous cell carcinoma
- affordable care act
- african american
- health insurance
- squamous cell
- adverse drug
- molecular dynamics
- density functional theory
- patient reported