Functional Validity of a Judgment Skills Measure within the Concept of Health Literacy for Sleeping Disorder Patients

The concept of health literacy has been widened to include higher order aspects such as patient decision-making skills while its measurement continued to rely narrowly on reading and numeracy skills, known as functional health literacy. We developed a Judgment Skills measure, designed to assess pati...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Arthur Dubowicz, Peter J. Schulz
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI AG 2014-10-01
Series:International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.mdpi.com/1660-4601/11/10/10868
id doaj-b753b77e81654ca88b0bdc11aca4a4a1
record_format Article
spelling doaj-b753b77e81654ca88b0bdc11aca4a4a12020-11-24T22:44:09ZengMDPI AGInternational Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health1660-46012014-10-011110108681088210.3390/ijerph111010868ijerph111010868Functional Validity of a Judgment Skills Measure within the Concept of Health Literacy for Sleeping Disorder PatientsArthur Dubowicz0Peter J. Schulz1Institute of Communication and Health, University of Lugano, Via G. Buffi 13, 6904 Lugano, SwitzerlandInstitute of Communication and Health, University of Lugano, Via G. Buffi 13, 6904 Lugano, SwitzerlandThe concept of health literacy has been widened to include higher order aspects such as patient decision-making skills while its measurement continued to rely narrowly on reading and numeracy skills, known as functional health literacy. We developed a Judgment Skills measure, designed to assess patients’ ability to make appropriate decisions with regard to their condition. The measure offers scenarios with answer options ranked for biomedical adequacy. This study aims to examine the psychometric properties and the functional validity of the Judgment Skills measure. A self-administered survey among 87 primary insomnia patients in the Italian-speaking part of Switzerland was conducted. The extensive path model included variables such as functional health literacy, coping with the medical condition, experience of the scenario, sleep quality, duration suffering, education, and age. Correlation analyses were conducted to link the variables. The Judgment Skills measure showed the expected significant correlations. In general, higher Judgment Skills were related to coping strategies leading to better health outcomes. Functional health literacy correlated highly with education, while Judgment Skills did not, which confirmed the conceptual difference of these skills. The findings propose a model for conducting research that does embrace the broader conceptualization of health literacy.http://www.mdpi.com/1660-4601/11/10/10868health literacyjudgment skillshealth behaviorpatient decisionsleeping disorders
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Arthur Dubowicz
Peter J. Schulz
spellingShingle Arthur Dubowicz
Peter J. Schulz
Functional Validity of a Judgment Skills Measure within the Concept of Health Literacy for Sleeping Disorder Patients
International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health
health literacy
judgment skills
health behavior
patient decision
sleeping disorders
author_facet Arthur Dubowicz
Peter J. Schulz
author_sort Arthur Dubowicz
title Functional Validity of a Judgment Skills Measure within the Concept of Health Literacy for Sleeping Disorder Patients
title_short Functional Validity of a Judgment Skills Measure within the Concept of Health Literacy for Sleeping Disorder Patients
title_full Functional Validity of a Judgment Skills Measure within the Concept of Health Literacy for Sleeping Disorder Patients
title_fullStr Functional Validity of a Judgment Skills Measure within the Concept of Health Literacy for Sleeping Disorder Patients
title_full_unstemmed Functional Validity of a Judgment Skills Measure within the Concept of Health Literacy for Sleeping Disorder Patients
title_sort functional validity of a judgment skills measure within the concept of health literacy for sleeping disorder patients
publisher MDPI AG
series International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health
issn 1660-4601
publishDate 2014-10-01
description The concept of health literacy has been widened to include higher order aspects such as patient decision-making skills while its measurement continued to rely narrowly on reading and numeracy skills, known as functional health literacy. We developed a Judgment Skills measure, designed to assess patients’ ability to make appropriate decisions with regard to their condition. The measure offers scenarios with answer options ranked for biomedical adequacy. This study aims to examine the psychometric properties and the functional validity of the Judgment Skills measure. A self-administered survey among 87 primary insomnia patients in the Italian-speaking part of Switzerland was conducted. The extensive path model included variables such as functional health literacy, coping with the medical condition, experience of the scenario, sleep quality, duration suffering, education, and age. Correlation analyses were conducted to link the variables. The Judgment Skills measure showed the expected significant correlations. In general, higher Judgment Skills were related to coping strategies leading to better health outcomes. Functional health literacy correlated highly with education, while Judgment Skills did not, which confirmed the conceptual difference of these skills. The findings propose a model for conducting research that does embrace the broader conceptualization of health literacy.
topic health literacy
judgment skills
health behavior
patient decision
sleeping disorders
url http://www.mdpi.com/1660-4601/11/10/10868
work_keys_str_mv AT arthurdubowicz functionalvalidityofajudgmentskillsmeasurewithintheconceptofhealthliteracyforsleepingdisorderpatients
AT peterjschulz functionalvalidityofajudgmentskillsmeasurewithintheconceptofhealthliteracyforsleepingdisorderpatients
_version_ 1725692700734259200