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Health Literacy and Appropriateness of <scp>Self‐Care</scp> and Pain Management in Osteoarthritis: An Understanding of the Patient's Perspective

David J. Hunter, Andrew J. McLachlan, Peter R. Carroll, Tom A. N. Wakefield, Rodney Stosic

2021Arthritis Care & Research30 citationsDOI

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: Management guidelines encourage self-care in patients with symptomatic osteoarthritis (OA). We undertook this study to investigate the relationship between health literacy (HL) and appropriateness of selection of self-care strategies in people with self-reported symptoms of OA. METHODS: We conducted an online national observational, demographically representative, cross-sectional survey of adults (ages 45-74 years). The eligibility criterion of "self-reported OA symptoms" was screened for using guideline-endorsed clinical criteria. Participants completed a custom-built questionnaire that included validated scales for HL, pain intensity, sleep quality, and OA function/disability. Management strategies were grouped into self-care activities, analgesics, and complementary medicines, and analyses of appropriateness were based on predefined, evidence-based quality indicators. RESULTS: Of 6,800 participants, 628 met the inclusion criteria and completed the survey. HL was categorized as follows: low (100 of 628, 15.9%), moderate (317 of 628, 50.5%), and excellent (211 of 628, 33.6%). In the past 7 days, mean pain intensity (0-10 scale) was 3.11 (95% confidence interval [95% CI] 3.06-3.16), and 71.7% of participants (450 of 628) had not achieved adequate pain relief. In the past month, 54.1% (340 of 628) reported disrupted sleep. Participants managed their pain with multiple self-care activities (mean 1.44; 95% CI 1.32-1.57), analgesics (mean 1.74; 95% CI 1.60-1.88), and complementary medicines (mean 1.01; 95% CI 0.90-1.12). There was a statistically significant (P < 0.001) interaction between HL and appropriateness of current management strategies (HL low, guideline-recommended management strategies less likely). Higher HL did not always translate into making appropriate pain management choices. CONCLUSION: Appropriate selection and use of evidence-based management options is critical for patients with OA to obtain the full benefits from their treatment. Knowledge about suitable choices for OA self-care is suboptimal, and future education should be tailored to different levels of HL.

Topics & Concepts

MedicineHealth literacyObservational studyPhysical therapyGuidelineConfidence intervalOsteoarthritisQuality of life (healthcare)Visual analogue scaleHealth careFamily medicineInternal medicineAlternative medicineNursingPathologyEconomicsEconomic growthHealth Literacy and Information AccessibilityOsteoarthritis Treatment and MechanismsRheumatoid Arthritis Research and Therapies
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