Title of article :
Health literacy among Indian adults seeking dental care
Author/Authors :
D’Cruz, Audrey M Department of Public Health Dentistry - AB Shetty Memorial Institute of Dental Sciences - Nitte University - Deralakatte - Mangalore, India , Shankar Aradhya, M R The Oxford Dental College - Hospital and Research Centre - Bangalore - Karnataka, India
Abstract :
Background: Poor literacy can impede one’s ability not only to seek out needed health information
but also to process, understand and use it to make appropriate health care decisions. The objective
of the study was to assess the health literacy among adult patients seeking oral health care at in a
private dental hospital in Bangalore, Karnataka, India.
Materials and Methods: A cross sectional questionnaire survey was carried out on 500 subjects.
The questionnaire designed by Chew and colleagues (2004) was modified and used as the survey
instrument. To be eligible to participate in the study, the participants had to be aged above 18 years
and able to read or write English/Kannada (local language). Analysis of variance (ANOVA) and
Student’s t‑test (two tailed, independent) was used to find the significance of study parameters at
95% confidence interval.
Results: About 60.4% of the subjects had low health literacy level, 29.4% average and only 10.2%
had high health literacy levels. Age and educational qualification had a suggestive significant difference
with the mean health literacy scores while gender did not have any significant difference. Subjects
who had completed post‑graduation (57.8%) too had low health literacy levels.
Conclusion: A large number of patients have low levels of health literacy that may interfere with
their ability to process and understand basic health information.
Keywords :
Health information , health literacy , health providers
Journal title :
Astroparticle Physics