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The relationships of health literacy, preferred involvement, and patient activation with perceived involvement in care among Mongolian patients with breast and cervical cancer

Dulmaa Munkhtogoo, Erdenekhuu Nansalmaa, Kuo‐Piao Chung

2021Patient Education and Counseling10 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: To explore the relationships of health literacy, preferred involvement, and patient activation with perceived involvement in care among patients with breast and cervical cancer. METHODS: A cross-sectional survey was conducted with patients aged 20 years or older, aware of their cancer diagnosis, and currently receiving care at the National Cancer Center, Mongolia. Descriptive statistics and multivariate regression analysis were used to identify the relationships among study variables. RESULTS: Two hundred twenty-five patients were included in the final analysis. Patients' perceived involvement was examined as two subdomains: patient information seeking (PIS) and patient decision-making (PDM). Patient health literacy was found to only significantly influence PIS, and patient preferred involvement demonstrated a significant influence only on PDM. However, patient activation predictor was found to significantly influence both PIS and PDM (PIS [β = 0.22, p = 0.00] and PDM [β = 0.14, p = 0.00]). CONCLUSION: Health literacy, preferred involvement, and patient activation each demonstrated distinct influences on patients' perceived involvement subdomains, with patient activation being the most important predictor. PRACTICE IMPLICATIONS: Comprehensive strategies at the healthcare organization, professional, and patient levels may help to facilitate and advance patient involvement in care, and ultimately improve the quality of healthcare services respective to domain of patient-centeredness.

Topics & Concepts

Health literacyMedicineMultivariate analysisHealth careFamily medicineDescriptive statisticsHealth Information National Trends SurveyCervical cancerBreast cancerLiteracyCross-sectional studyCancerPatient participationPsychologyInternal medicineHealth informationPathologyMathematicsEconomicsPedagogyStatisticsEconomic growthHealth Literacy and Information AccessibilityPatient-Provider Communication in HealthcarePatient Satisfaction in Healthcare