Parental Health Literacy, Empowerment, and Advocacy for Food Allergy Safety in Schools: A Cross-Sectional Study.

Laura W Koo, Cynthia Baur, Alice M Horowitz, Min Qi Wang
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Abstract

Background: Approximately 8% of elementary school-aged children in the United States have food allergies, a complicated health management situation that requires parents to use many types of health literacy, empowerment, and advocacy skills to work with school staff to protect their children.

Objective: This cross-sectional study examined (a) whether the highest versus lowest levels of functional, communicative, and critical health literacy are associated with higher perceived effectiveness of parental advocacy behaviors for safe food allergy management in schools [parental advocacy]; and (b) whether communicative and critical health literacy are more strongly associated with parental advocacy than functional health literacy.

Methods: A sample of parents of elementary school-aged children was recruited through 26 food allergy organizations and a research patient registry. Participants completed an anonymous online survey. Self-reported measurements of parental health literacy, empowerment, and advocacy were adapted and refined through pre-testing and pilot-testing. General linear model analyses were conducted to predict parental advocacy.

Key results: Participants (N = 313) were predominantly White, college-educated mothers with moderately high levels of food allergy knowledge, health literacy, empowerment, and parental advocacy skills. Parents who scored at the highest levels in the three dimensions of health literacy reported they engaged in more effective advocacy behaviors than parents who scored at the lowest levels. Parental advocacy was predicted largely by parental empowerment and the quality of the relationship with the school (B = .41 and B = .40, respectively). Functional health literacy and the child's diagnosis of asthma were smaller predictors. While accounting for covariates, functional health literacy was significantly associated with parental advocacy whereas communicative and critical health literacy were not.

Conclusions: Interventions to impact parental empowerment and parent-school relationships, including a health-literate universal precautions approach of communicating food allergy school policies, may influence parental advocacy for food allergy safety in schools. Further research could use a performance-based multidimensional measure of health literacy. [HLRP: Health Literacy Research and Practice. 2023;7(3):e165-e175.].

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家长健康素养、授权和倡导学校食物过敏安全:一项横断面研究。
背景:在美国,大约8%的小学学龄儿童患有食物过敏,这是一个复杂的健康管理状况,需要父母使用多种类型的健康素养、授权和倡导技能与学校工作人员一起保护他们的孩子。目的:本横断面研究检验了(a)最高与最低水平的功能、沟通和关键健康素养是否与学校中父母倡导安全食物过敏管理行为的更高感知有效性相关[父母倡导];(b)与功能性健康素养相比,交际性和批判性健康素养与父母倡导的关系是否更为密切。方法:通过26个食物过敏组织和研究患者登记处招募小学适龄儿童的父母样本。参与者完成了一份匿名在线调查。通过预测试和试点测试,对父母健康素养、赋权和宣传的自我报告测量进行了调整和完善。一般线性模型分析用于预测父母的支持。主要结果:参与者(N = 313)主要是白人,受过大学教育的母亲,具有中等水平的食物过敏知识,健康素养,赋权和父母倡导技能。在健康素养的三个维度中得分最高的父母报告说,他们比得分最低的父母采取了更有效的宣传行为。父母的支持主要由父母的授权和与学校的关系质量来预测(B = 0.41和B = 0.40分别)。功能健康素养和儿童哮喘诊断是较小的预测因子。在考虑协变量时,功能性健康素养与父母倡导显著相关,而沟通性和批判性健康素养则无关。结论:影响家长授权和家长-学校关系的干预措施,包括健康知识普及预防方法,传达学校食物过敏政策,可能会影响家长对学校食物过敏安全的倡导。进一步的研究可以使用基于绩效的多维卫生素养衡量标准。[j].健康素养研究与实践[j].中国卫生科学,2013;7(3):e165-e175。
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来源期刊
Health literacy research and practice
Health literacy research and practice Medicine-Medicine (all)
CiteScore
4.90
自引率
0.00%
发文量
37
审稿时长
36 weeks
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