Thursday, February 25, 2010

Health Literacy Issues Among Women with Visual Impairments

There are few blog posts I enjoy as much as sharing a fresh publication, really. So here's a new article out in Research in Gerontological Nursing, with Tracie Harrison from the UT School of Nursing as the first author. The abstract is:

The purpose of this secondary analysis using qualitative description was to explore health literacy using the health care experiences of women with permanent visual impairments (VIs). Interviews were analyzed from a sample of 15 community-dwelling women ages 44 to 79 with permanent VIs who had participated in a larger grounded theory study. The 15 women were interviewed twice; the audio-recorded interviews were then transcribed verbatim and analyzed using qualitative content analysis. Using the Institute of Medicine’s definition of health literacy, the women’s experiences were categorized into their ability to obtain, process, and understand health information. Their perceptions of the factors that influenced their health literacy were also explored. The women voiced that barriers to their ability to gain information in a format amenable to their processing skills, combined with barriers arising from health care providers’ attitudes, undermined their ability to build health literacy capacity.

The full article is available on the journal website here.

0 comments: