The Environmental Health Literacy of Italian General Population: The SPeRA Cross-Sectional Study

Author:

Bert Fabrizio12,Gea Marta1ORCID,Previti Christian1,Massocco Gregorio1,Lo Moro Giuseppina1ORCID,Scaioli Giacomo1ORCID,Schilirò Tiziana1ORCID,Siliquini Roberta13

Affiliation:

1. Department of Public Health and Pediatrics, University of Turin, 10126 Turin, Italy

2. Hygiene and Infection Control Unit, ASL TO3, 10098 Turin, Italy

3. AOU City of Health and Science of Turin, 10126 Turin, Italy

Abstract

Environmental health literacy (EHL) includes knowledge of health effects due to environmental exposure and skills to protect health from environmental risks. This study investigated some aspects about EHL of the Italian adult population. Data were collected through questionnaires (n = 672) and analysed through multivariable logistic regression models. Results showed that participants with incomplete/insufficient self-perceived knowledge of health effects due to environmental risks verified less information about this topic (adjOR = 0.38 (CI95% 0.25–0.59)/0.09 (0.04–0.21); p < 0.001/<0.001), potentially spreading fake news. The self-perceived exposure to pollution was higher in participants living in towns than in rural areas (small, medium, big towns adjOR = 2.37 (1.41–3.97), 2.10 (1.11–3.96), 3.11 (1.53–6.31); p = 0.001, 0.022, 0.002) and lower in participants with incomplete/insufficient knowledge about pollution effects (adjOR = 0.54 (0.32–0.92)/0.30 (0.13–0.67); p = 0.022/0.004), confirming that knowledge is essential to achieve awareness. Since insufficient self-perceived knowledge of pollution effects was negatively associated with the adoption of pro-environmental behaviours (adjOR = 0.37 (0.15–0.90); p = 0.028), EHL was proven to be a virtuous behaviour promoter. Finally, a lack of institutional support, time and cost were identified as barriers to pro-environmental behaviours. This study provided useful data to design prevention programmes, underlined some barriers to pro-environmental behaviours and highlighted the need to promote attitudes and behaviours aimed at contrasting environmental pollution, thus protecting human health.

Publisher

MDPI AG

Subject

Health, Toxicology and Mutagenesis,Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health

Reference25 articles.

1. World Health Organization—WHO (2023, January 12). Global Assessment of the Burden of Disease from Environmental Risks. Updated 2016 Data Tables. Available online: https://www.who.int/publications/i/item/9789241565196.

2. The Lancet Commission on pollution and health;Landrigan;Lancet,2018

3. New perspectives on environmental health: The approval of new definitions;Cruickshank;J. Environ. Health,2013

4. Gray, K.M. (2018). From Content Knowledge to Community Change: A Review of Representations of Environmental Health Literacy. Int. J. Environ. Res. Public Health, 15.

5. The Emergence of Environmental Health Literacy-From Its Roots to Its Future Potential;Finn;Environ. Health Perspect.,2017

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