The Health Literacy Questionnaire (HLQ) at the patient-clinician interface: a qualitative study of what patients and clinicians mean by their HLQ scores.
Melanie HawkinsStephen D GillRoy BatterhamGerald R ElsworthRichard H OsbornePublished in: BMC health services research (2017)
This study shows that the HLQ can act as an adjunct to clinical practice to help clinicians understand a patient's health literacy challenges and strengths early in a clinical encounter. Importantly, clinicians can use the HLQ to detect differences between their own perspectives about a patient's health literacy and the patient's perspective, and to initiate discussion to explore this. Provision of training to better detect these differences may assist clinicians to provide improved care. The outcomes of this study contribute to the growing body of international validation evidence about the use of the HLQ in different contexts. More specifically, this study has shown that the HLQ has measurement veracity at the patient and clinician level and may support clinicians to understand patients' health literacy and enable a deeper engagement with healthcare services.