Development of a battery of phase-adaptive health literacy tests for stroke survivors
Journal
Patient Education and Counseling
Journal Volume
103
Journal Issue
11
Pages
2342-2346
Date Issued
2020
Author(s)
Abstract
Objective: We aimed to develop a health literacy battery for three phases of stroke (HL-3S). Methods: Three Rasch-based item banks corresponding to health care, disability prevention, and health promotion in the acute, subacute, and chronic phases of stroke, respectively, were developed by a multidisciplinary stroke team. To construct the HL-3S, a panel of clinical and Rasch experts selected items from the three Rasch-based item banks according to content representativeness and item difficulty diversity. Additionally, the validity and reliability of the HL-3S were examined using Rasch analysis. Results: This study included 442 patients. Each of the three tests in the HL-3S contained 10 items with a 5-point scale of difficulty levels. The items in HL-3S demonstrated unidimensionality, local independence, and favorable Rasch reliability. Conclusion: The HL-3S, with 10 items in each test, had favorable construct validity and Rasch reliability. The HL-3S can be considered as a quick-to-administer and phase-adaptive test battery of health literacy for stroke survivors. Practice Implications: Clinicians may select one of the tests in the HL-3S corresponding with the patient's stroke recovery timeline and thereby provide adaptive health education programs to increase the patient's ability to actively participate in health care, disability prevention, and health promotion, respectively. ? 2020 Elsevier B.V.
Subjects
Health literacy; Outcome assessment; Phases of stroke recovery; Rasch analysis; Stroke
SDGs
Other Subjects
adult; aged; Article; cerebrovascular accident; clinical outcome; community reintegration; disability prevention; disease severity; female; health care; health literacy; health literacy battery for three phases of stroke; health promotion; human; major clinical study; male; middle aged; multidisciplinary team; outcome assessment; priority journal; prospective study; psychometry; Rasch analysis; reliability; stroke survivor; validation study; wellbeing; cerebrovascular accident; questionnaire; reproducibility; stroke rehabilitation; very elderly; Adult; Aged; Aged, 80 and over; Female; Health Literacy; Humans; Male; Middle Aged; Outcome Assessment, Health Care; Prospective Studies; Psychometrics; Reproducibility of Results; Stroke; Stroke Rehabilitation; Surveys and Questionnaires
Publisher
Elsevier Ireland Ltd
Type
journal article