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Measuring General Health Literacy in Chinese adults: validation of the HLS19-Q12 instrument

Rongmei Liu, Qiuping Zhao, M. Y. Yu, Hui Chen, Xiaomo Yang, Shuaibin Liu, Orkan Okan, Xinghan Chen, Yuhan Xing, Shuaijun Guo

2024BMC Public Health16 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Abstract Background Health literacy measurement lays a solid foundation to identify associations with health outcomes and monitor population health literacy levels over time. In mainland China, most existing health literacy instruments are either knowledge-based or practice-based, making health literacy results incomparable between China and other countries. This study aimed to examine the reliability and validity of the 12-item Health Literacy Population Survey (HLS 19 -Q12) in a general population of Chinese adults. Methods A cross-sectional study was conducted to recruit primary carers of students from 11 schools in Zhengzhou, Henan Province, using convenience cluster sampling. Participants completed an online self-administered survey that collected information on key sociodemographics, health literacy (HLS 19 -Q12 and a comparison tool: Health Literacy Questionnaire (HLQ)), and health-related outcomes. Using the COnsensus-based Standards for the selection of health status Measurement Instruments (COSMIN) checklist as a guideline, we tested internal consistency, test-retest reliability, content validity, structural validity, concurrent predictive validity, and convergent validity of the HLS 19 -Q12. Results Overall, 14,184 participants completed the full survey. The HLS 19 -Q12 showed excellent internal consistency (Cronbach’s α = 0.93), moderate test-retest reliability (intra-class correlation coefficient = 0.54), satisfactory content validity (based on the 12-matrix health literacy model), and strong structural validity (comparative fit index = 0.94, Tucker and Lewis’s index of fit = 0.93, root mean square error of approximation = 0.095). Concurrent predictive validity results showed health literacy was associated with both health determinants and health-related outcomes. The HLS 19 -Q12 had weak to strong correlations (coefficients = 0.24 to 0.42) with the nine scales of the HLQ. Respondents had an average score of 81.6 (± 23.0) when using the HLS 19 -Q12, with 35.0% and 7.5% having problematic and inadequate levels of health literacy, respectively. Conclusions The HLS 19 -Q12 is a reliable and valid instrument to measure health literacy in our sample. Further validation is needed with a more nationally representative sample of Chinese adults. The HLS 19 -Q12 could be used as a comprehensive, skills-based, and easy-to-administer health literacy assessment tool integrated into population surveys and intervention evaluations.

Topics & Concepts

Health literacyMedicineCronbach's alphaContent validityPopulationConvergent validityGuidelineLiteracyBiostatisticsCriterion validityPublic healthFamily medicineGerontologyClinical psychologyConstruct validityPsychometricsHealth carePsychologyEnvironmental healthNursingInternal consistencyPathologyPedagogyEconomic growthEconomicsHealth Literacy and Information AccessibilityBreastfeeding Practices and InfluencesMobile Health and mHealth Applications