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The role of health literacy in cancer care: A mixed studies systematic review

The role of health literacy in cancer care: A mixed studies systematic review
The role of health literacy in cancer care: A mixed studies systematic review
Background
Patients diagnosed with cancer face many challenges and need a good understanding of their diagnosis and proposed treatments to make informed decisions about their care. Health literacy plays an important role in this and low health literacy has been associated with poorer outcomes. The aims of this review are to identify which outcomes relate to health literacy in patients with cancer, and to combine this through a mixed studies approach with the patient experience as described through qualitative studies.

Methods
Four electronic databases were searched in January 2021 to identify records relating to health literacy and patients with cancer. Records were independently screened then assessed for inclusion by two reviewers according to the following criteria: patients aged ≥18 years with cancer, English language publication AND health literacy measured with validated tool and measured outcome associated with health literacy OR qualitative study exploring the role of health literacy as patients make decisions about health. Quality was independently assessed by two reviewers. A narrative synthesis was performed, and findings integrated through concept mapping. This systematic review was registered with PROSPERO, entry CRD42020166454.

Results
4441 records were retrieved. Following de-duplication, 2496 titles and abstracts were screened and full texts of 405 papers were reviewed for eligibility. 66 papers relating to 60 studies met the eligibility criteria. Lower health literacy was associated with greater difficulties understanding and processing cancer related information, poorer quality of life and poorer experience of care. Personal and situational influences contributed to how participants processed information and reached decisions about their care.

Conclusion
This review highlights the important role of health literacy for patients with cancer. Outcomes are poorer for those who experience difficulties with health literacy. Further efforts should be made to facilitate understanding, develop health literacy and support patients to become more involved in their care.
1932-6203
Holden, Chloe, Elizabeth
3fd3c835-23d6-46e0-89d6-e9706906d851
Wheelwright, Sally
2df90681-fb0a-4871-ae7d-75c88b35024b
Harle, Amelie
83036d4b-1eba-4d9b-b8f4-e8e57fd85978
Wagland, Richard
16a44dcc-29cd-4797-9af2-41ef87f64d08
Holden, Chloe, Elizabeth
3fd3c835-23d6-46e0-89d6-e9706906d851
Wheelwright, Sally
2df90681-fb0a-4871-ae7d-75c88b35024b
Harle, Amelie
83036d4b-1eba-4d9b-b8f4-e8e57fd85978
Wagland, Richard
16a44dcc-29cd-4797-9af2-41ef87f64d08

Holden, Chloe, Elizabeth, Wheelwright, Sally, Harle, Amelie and Wagland, Richard (2021) The role of health literacy in cancer care: A mixed studies systematic review. PLoS ONE, 16 (11 November), [e0259815]. (doi:10.1371/journal.pone.0259815).

Record type: Review

Abstract

Background
Patients diagnosed with cancer face many challenges and need a good understanding of their diagnosis and proposed treatments to make informed decisions about their care. Health literacy plays an important role in this and low health literacy has been associated with poorer outcomes. The aims of this review are to identify which outcomes relate to health literacy in patients with cancer, and to combine this through a mixed studies approach with the patient experience as described through qualitative studies.

Methods
Four electronic databases were searched in January 2021 to identify records relating to health literacy and patients with cancer. Records were independently screened then assessed for inclusion by two reviewers according to the following criteria: patients aged ≥18 years with cancer, English language publication AND health literacy measured with validated tool and measured outcome associated with health literacy OR qualitative study exploring the role of health literacy as patients make decisions about health. Quality was independently assessed by two reviewers. A narrative synthesis was performed, and findings integrated through concept mapping. This systematic review was registered with PROSPERO, entry CRD42020166454.

Results
4441 records were retrieved. Following de-duplication, 2496 titles and abstracts were screened and full texts of 405 papers were reviewed for eligibility. 66 papers relating to 60 studies met the eligibility criteria. Lower health literacy was associated with greater difficulties understanding and processing cancer related information, poorer quality of life and poorer experience of care. Personal and situational influences contributed to how participants processed information and reached decisions about their care.

Conclusion
This review highlights the important role of health literacy for patients with cancer. Outcomes are poorer for those who experience difficulties with health literacy. Further efforts should be made to facilitate understanding, develop health literacy and support patients to become more involved in their care.

Text
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More information

Published date: 12 November 2021

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 452308
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/452308
ISSN: 1932-6203
PURE UUID: a4aa8792-a7c4-42b7-ad01-06ffec2cf1ac
ORCID for Chloe, Elizabeth Holden: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-4656-101X
ORCID for Sally Wheelwright: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0003-0657-2483
ORCID for Richard Wagland: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0003-1825-7587

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Date deposited: 06 Dec 2021 17:36
Last modified: 17 Mar 2024 03:58

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Contributors

Author: Chloe, Elizabeth Holden ORCID iD
Author: Amelie Harle
Author: Richard Wagland ORCID iD

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