Health Insurance Literacy and Low Wage Earners: Why Reading Matters

Iris Feinberg, D. Greenberg, Elizabeth L. Tighe, M. Ogrodnick
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引用次数: 3

Abstract

Health literacy is the ability of people to access, understand, and use health information (U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, 2010). Adults with low health literacy have low reading, numeracy, and digital skills which means that they have difficulty reading medication and discharge instructions, following instructions on a prescription bottle, using a table or chart to calculate their insurance deductibles, finding accurate health information on the Internet and/ or understanding the concept of risk (America’s Health Literacy: Why We Need Accessible Health Information, 2008; Bartholomae, Russell, Braun, & McCoy, 2016; Feinberg, Greenberg, & Frijters, 2015). Low health literacy is correlated with lower levels of educational attainment, higher use of non-print health information sources (radio or television), and less use of the Internet for accessing health information (Feinberg et al., 2015). Individual health literacy does not exist in a vaccum; rather, it is the interplay between one’s individual skills and the health literacy level of information that is provided that can further complicate how individuals access, understand, and use health information (Berkman, Davis, & McCormack, 2010; Rudd, 2015). Differences in culture, ethnicity, language, and social determinants of health such as socioeconomic status also affect an individual’s health literacy. Beliefs about health and health care, the meanings of words, access to health care, preferences of language and cultural beliefs all have a Abstract In the United States, worker health care is funded through health insurance plans paid for by employers. Insurance plans are written in complicated language that low wage earners (LWE), who have lower levels of education, may find difficult to understand. We examined the relationship between health insurance literacy (HIL), education, and literacy skills for 75 LWE. Results indicated low to moderate associations between literacies (reading, numeracy, digital), educational attainment and HIL; in a multiple regression analysis, only reading was uniquely significant. LWE with low educational attainment and poor reading skills may need additional support to understand and use their health insurance. Research Article
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健康保险素养和低收入者:为什么阅读很重要
健康素养是指人们获取、理解和使用健康信息的能力(美国卫生与公众服务部,2010年)。健康素养较低的成年人阅读、计算和数字技能较低,这意味着他们在阅读药物和出院说明、遵循处方瓶上的说明、使用表格或图表计算其保险免赔额、在互联网上找到准确的健康信息和/或理解风险概念方面存在困难(美国健康素养:为什么我们需要无障碍健康信息,2008年;Bartholomae, Russell, Braun, & McCoy, 2016;Feinberg, Greenberg, & Frijters, 2015)。低健康素养与较低的教育程度、较高的非印刷健康信息源(广播或电视)使用以及较少使用互联网获取健康信息相关(Feinberg et al., 2015)。个人卫生知识不是真空存在的;相反,个人技能与所提供信息的健康素养水平之间的相互作用可能会使个人如何获取、理解和使用健康信息进一步复杂化(Berkman, Davis, & McCormack, 2010;陆克文,2015)。文化、种族、语言和社会经济地位等健康的社会决定因素的差异也会影响个人的健康素养。关于健康和医疗保健的信念,词语的含义,获得医疗保健的机会,语言偏好和文化信仰都有一个摘要在美国,工人的医疗保健是通过雇主支付的健康保险计划来资助的。保险计划是用复杂的语言写成的,受教育程度较低的低收入者(LWE)可能很难理解。我们研究了75名LWE的健康保险素养(HIL)、教育和素养技能之间的关系。结果表明,读写能力(阅读、计算、数字)、受教育程度与HIL之间存在低至中等程度的关联;在多元回归分析中,只有阅读是唯一显著的。教育程度低、阅读能力差的LWE可能需要额外的支持来理解和使用他们的健康保险。研究文章
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