Measuring Comprehensive, General Health Literacy in the General Adult Population: The Development and Validation of the HLS19-Q12 Instrument in Seventeen Countries

Int J Environ Res Public Health. 2022 Oct 29;19(21):14129. doi: 10.3390/ijerph192114129.

Abstract

Background: For improving health literacy (HL) by national and international public health policy, measuring population HL by a comprehensive instrument is needed. A short instrument, the HLS19-Q12 based on the HLS-EU-Q47, was developed, translated, applied, and validated in 17 countries in the WHO European Region.

Methods: For factorial validity/dimensionality, Cronbach alphas, confirmatory factor analysis (CFA), Rasch model (RM), and Partial Credit Model (PCM) were used. For discriminant validity, correlation analysis, and for concurrent predictive validity, linear regression analysis were carried out.

Results: The Cronbach alpha coefficients are above 0.7. The fit indices for the single-factor CFAs indicate a good model fit. Some items show differential item functioning in certain country data sets. The regression analyses demonstrate an association of the HLS19-Q12 score with social determinants and selected consequences of HL. The HLS19-Q12 score correlates sufficiently highly (r ≥ 0.897) with the equivalent score for the HLS19-Q47 long form.

Conclusions: The HLS19-Q12, based on a comprehensive understanding of HL, shows acceptable psychometric and validity characteristics for different languages, country contexts, and methods of data collection, and is suitable for measuring HL in general, national, adult populations. There are also indications for further improvement of the instrument.

Keywords: HLS19; HLS19-Q12; health literacy measurement; instrument development; national adult population; validation.

Publication types

  • Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't

MeSH terms

  • Factor Analysis, Statistical
  • Health Literacy*
  • Language
  • Psychometrics
  • Reproducibility of Results
  • Surveys and Questionnaires

Grants and funding

This research received no external funding, but the data collection was supported either by ministries of health, university, public health institutes, or insurance funds in the different countries. AT: The Austrian Health Literacy Survey was commissioned and financed by the Austrian Federal Health Agency and the Federation of Austrian Social Insurance Institutions. BE: There were no support for data collection in Belgium from any organization. BG: Medical University—Sofia, Faculty of Public Health and AGREEMENT No. D-125/24.06.2020, PROJECT No. 8418/21.11.2019, “GRANT-2020”, MU-Sofia. CH The Swiss Federal Office of Public Health FOPH with a financial contribution from the foundation Health Promotion Switzerland. CZ: Data collection was funded by (all seven) Czech health insurance funds. DE: The German study was funded by the German Federal Ministry of Health, grant number: Kapitel 1504 Titel 54401, ZMV I 1-2518 004 (HLS-GER 2). DK: The distribution of the questionnaire was funded by Aalborg University. FR: The research was supported by the National Public Health agency (Santé Publique France, 21DPPA040-0) and by Ligue contre le cancer (LIGUE2019). HU: The research was supported by the Ministry of Human Capacities, Hungary (IV/956-740 4/2020/EKF). IE: Department of Health, Dublin. IL: The Israel study was funded by the Israel Ministry of Health and Clalit Health Services, Israel. IT: The Italian participation to the Action Network on Measuring Population and Organizational Health Literacy (M-POHL Network) was funded by the Istituto Superiore di Sanità, Rome, Italy; the implementation of the Health Literacy Survey-HLS19 in Italy was funded by the National Centre for Disease Prevention and Control (CCM) of the Italian Ministry of Health and coordinated by the Department of cardiovascular, endocrine–metabolic diseases and aging of the Istituto Superiore di Sanità, Rome, Italy. NO: The Norwegian HLS19 was commissioned and financed by the Norwegian Ministry of Health and Care Services. The Norwegian Directorate of Health funded the data collection and the administrative costs for the whole project, while Oslo Metropolitan University and Inland Norway University of Applied Sciences contributed with the scientific workforce. PT: Direção-Geral da Saúde, Lisbon. RU: The Russian study was supported by the Ministry of Health of the Russian Federation and WHO Europe. SI: The national survey of Health literacy in Slovenia took place within the framework of the project Increasing health literacy in Slovenia-ZaPiS, which is co-financed by the Republic of Slovenia to the amount of 20% of the value and the European Union from the European Social Fund to the amount of 80% of the value. SK: Public Health Authority of the Slovak Republic, Bratislava.