The effect of self-efficacy on health literacy in the German population

Author:

Berens Eva-Maria1ORCID,Pelikan Jürgen M2,Schaeffer Doris1

Affiliation:

1. Interdisciplinary Centre for Health Literacy Research, Bielefeld University, Universitaetsstrasse 25, 33615 Bielefeld, Germany

2. Gesundheit Oesterreich GmbH (Austrian Public Health Institute), Gesundheit Oesterreich GmbH, Stubenring 6, 1010 Vienna, Austria

Abstract

Summary Concerning the determinants of health literacy (HL) mostly socio-demographic or -economic factors have been considered, much less so psychological factors such as self-efficacy. To date, it has mostly been considered to explain the relationship of HL and health outcomes. However, self-efficacy could also be an important determinant for HL. This study therefore examines the effect of self-efficacy on comprehensive HL within the general population in Germany. Data from the German HL Survey (HLS-GER), a cross-sectional, computer-assisted personal interview study among 2000 respondents aged 15+ years in 2014 were used. Self-efficacy was measured using the German version of general self-efficacy short scale (ASKU), comprehensive HL was measured using the German version of the European Health Literacy Survey Questionnaire (HLS-EU-Q47). Correlation and multi-variate linear regression analyses were performed to analyze independent effects of socio-demographic factors—age, gender, social status, educational level and migration background—functional HL and self-efficacy on comprehensive HL. Self-efficacy and comprehensive HL are statistically significantly correlated (Spearman’s Rho = 0.405; p < 0.01), respondents with better self-efficacy had better HL scores. Both concepts are significantly associated with most socio-demographic factors and functional HL. Self-efficacy showed the strongest association with HL in the multivariate analyses (model 2: β =0.310, p < 0.001). The effect size of the other predictors decreased, when adding self-efficacy into the equation, but remained statistically significant. Self-efficacy is a rather strong predictor of comprehensive HL. Future research and measures to improve HL should therefore take self-efficacy adequately into account.

Funder

German Federal Ministry of Justice and Consumer Protection, Berlin, Germany

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health,Health(social science)

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