Relationship Between Medication Literacy, Health Literacy, and Medication Behavior Among Medical School Students: A Cross-sectional Study

Author:

An Chengyu1ORCID,Wang Yujia2,Feng Bojunhao3,Zhang Jingbo2,Hou Ruyi4,Huang Xincheng5,Zhu Zhu6,Sun Xinying7ORCID,Wu Yibo7ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Clinical Sciences, China Medical University, Shenyang, China

2. School of Humanities and Social Sciences, Harbin Medical University, Harbin, China

3. School of Medicine, Macau University of Science and Technology, Macau, China

4. Department of Humanities, Arts and Media, Changzhi Medical School, Changzhi,China

5. School of Economics and Management, Beijing Institute of Graphic Communication, Beijing, China

6. Department of Pharmacy, Peking Union Medical school Hospital, Chinese Academy of Medical Sciences, Beijing, China

7. School of Public Health, Peking University, Beijing, China

Abstract

Background: Nowadays, college students are more accessible and susceptible to being exposed to mixed information than ever, which results in a growing concern about their health problems and medication behaviors. This study aimed to investigate the correlation between medication literacy, health literacy, and medication behavior among medical school students. Methods: A cluster random sampling method was used to select 1324 undergraduate students from a medical school in China as participants for the questionnaire survey in 2020. After quality control, 1183 valid questionnaires were collected (an effective rate of 89.4%). Descriptive statistics analysis, chi-square test, binary logistic regression analysis, and path analysis were conducted using SPSS 25.0. Results: Of the 1183 respondents whose mean age was 19.06, 164 (13.9%) were considered to have good medication literacy, 150 (12.7%) had good health literacy, and 497(42.0%) exhibited good medication behaviors. Lower grades, higher health literacy levels, and higher medication literacy levels were effective in better performance on medication use behavior (P<0.001). Poor self-assessment of health status was correlated with worse medication behavior (P<0.05). it was concluded that medication literacy may be an intermediate variable linking health literacy and medication use behavior. Conclusion: Students in the medical college showed much higher rates of rational medication use when they have medication and health literacy. There was an indirect positive relationship between health literacy and medication behavior through medication literacy (P<0.001). Therefore, health literacy and medication literacy can be an essential part of medication safety education for college students as well as an ideal indicator for educational outcome evaluation.

Publisher

Maad Rayan Publishing Company

Subject

Health Informatics,Education,Health (social science)

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