Literacy Critical to Heart Failure Management: A scoping Review
Abstract
Heart failure is a complex clinical syndrome most commonly encountered among older
adults. This complex clinical syndrome is associated with poor health outcomes such
as frequent admissions and mortality. These adverse outcomes are commonly
associated with poor self-care and lower health literacy. Literacy is a combination of
knowledge and skills and often reflected by appropriate interaction with the community,
while health literacy is the cognitive and social skills reflected by accessing and
comprehending health information and making appropriate health decisions. These
decisions are common and challenging to patients with heart failure. Poor outcomes
are said to be reduced by adequate self-care, which is associated with health literacy
among heart failure patients. Better self-care was also shown to be associated with
self-efficacy and self-confidence that were in turn associated with health literacy.
Hence, enhancing health literacy among patient with heart failure is critical to enable
them to increase control over their disease by better understanding and participating in
health care, while being empowered to take part in designing health care services and
even tailoring research to serve their needs and consequently improve outcome at the
individual and community level. In clinical practice, assessing health literacy,
measuring health literacy and identifying patients at risk of low nutrition literacy is
important to enhance health literacy and health outcomes. Hence, developing reliable
and valid methods and tools for assessment and developing tailored and targeted
interventions is of critical importance.
Journal/Conference Information
Heart Failure Review,DOI: 0000, ISSN: 1382-4147, Volume: 1, Issue: 1, Pages Range: 1-7,