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Towards an understanding of the relationship of functional literacy and numeracy to geographical health inequalities

Towards an understanding of the relationship of functional literacy and numeracy to geographical health inequalities
Towards an understanding of the relationship of functional literacy and numeracy to geographical health inequalities
The relative contributions of functional literacy and functional numeracy to health disparities remain poorly understood in developed world contexts. We seek to unpack their distinctive contributions and to examine how these contributions are framed by place-based deprivation and rurality. We present a multilevel logistic analysis of the 2011 Skills for Life Survey (SfLS), a representative governmental survey of adults aged 16-65 in England. Outcome measures were self-assessed health status and the presence of self-reported long-term health conditions. Exposure variables were functional literacy (FL) and functional numeracy (FN). Age, sex, individual socio-economic status, ethnicity, whether English was a first language, non-UK birthplaces, housing tenure and geography were included as potential confounders and mediators. Geography was measured as area-based deprivation and urban/rural status. FL and FN were both independently associated with self-assessed health status, though the association attenuated after taking account of confounders and mediators. For long-term conditions, the association with FN remained significant following inclusion of confounders and mediators whilst FL attenuated to non-significance. Rurality did not influence these associations. Area deprivation was a significant factor in attenuating the association between FL and self-assessed health status. Policy makers and health professionals will need to be aware of the distinctive impact of FN as well as FL when combating health inequalities, promoting health and managing long-term conditions.
England, health inequalities, functional literacy, functional numeracy, area deprivation
0277-9536
185-193
Moon, G.
68cffc4d-72c1-41e9-b1fa-1570c5f3a0b4
Aitken, Grant
aeaa0f62-76c2-4adc-97ba-8533cdb9d11c
Roderick, P.
dbb3cd11-4c51-4844-982b-0eb30ad5085a
Fraser, Simon
135884b6-8737-4e8a-a98c-5d803ac7a2dc
Rowlands, Gill
cda3d552-df97-4964-8e07-eb6962d7f4fc
Moon, G.
68cffc4d-72c1-41e9-b1fa-1570c5f3a0b4
Aitken, Grant
aeaa0f62-76c2-4adc-97ba-8533cdb9d11c
Roderick, P.
dbb3cd11-4c51-4844-982b-0eb30ad5085a
Fraser, Simon
135884b6-8737-4e8a-a98c-5d803ac7a2dc
Rowlands, Gill
cda3d552-df97-4964-8e07-eb6962d7f4fc

Moon, G., Aitken, Grant, Roderick, P., Fraser, Simon and Rowlands, Gill (2015) Towards an understanding of the relationship of functional literacy and numeracy to geographical health inequalities. Social Science & Medicine, 143, 185-193. (doi:10.1016/j.socscimed.2015.08.045). (PMID:26363450)

Record type: Article

Abstract

The relative contributions of functional literacy and functional numeracy to health disparities remain poorly understood in developed world contexts. We seek to unpack their distinctive contributions and to examine how these contributions are framed by place-based deprivation and rurality. We present a multilevel logistic analysis of the 2011 Skills for Life Survey (SfLS), a representative governmental survey of adults aged 16-65 in England. Outcome measures were self-assessed health status and the presence of self-reported long-term health conditions. Exposure variables were functional literacy (FL) and functional numeracy (FN). Age, sex, individual socio-economic status, ethnicity, whether English was a first language, non-UK birthplaces, housing tenure and geography were included as potential confounders and mediators. Geography was measured as area-based deprivation and urban/rural status. FL and FN were both independently associated with self-assessed health status, though the association attenuated after taking account of confounders and mediators. For long-term conditions, the association with FN remained significant following inclusion of confounders and mediators whilst FL attenuated to non-significance. Rurality did not influence these associations. Area deprivation was a significant factor in attenuating the association between FL and self-assessed health status. Policy makers and health professionals will need to be aware of the distinctive impact of FN as well as FL when combating health inequalities, promoting health and managing long-term conditions.

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Accepted/In Press date: 25 August 2015
e-pub ahead of print date: 30 August 2015
Published date: October 2015
Keywords: England, health inequalities, functional literacy, functional numeracy, area deprivation
Organisations: Population, Health & Wellbeing (PHeW)

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 380984
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/380984
ISSN: 0277-9536
PURE UUID: 01a7b65f-12f1-441b-b61d-799ff0fc97a8
ORCID for G. Moon: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-7256-8397
ORCID for P. Roderick: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0001-9475-6850
ORCID for Simon Fraser: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-4172-4406

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Date deposited: 22 Sep 2015 09:10
Last modified: 15 Mar 2024 03:31

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Contributors

Author: G. Moon ORCID iD
Author: Grant Aitken
Author: P. Roderick ORCID iD
Author: Simon Fraser ORCID iD
Author: Gill Rowlands

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