Organizational health literacy in facilities for people with disabilities: First results of an explorative qualitative and quantitative study

Research output: Journal contributionsJournal articlesResearchpeer-review

Standard

Organizational health literacy in facilities for people with disabilities : First results of an explorative qualitative and quantitative study. / Rathmann, Katharina; Vockert, Theres; Wetzel, Lorena Denise et al.

In: International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health, Vol. 17, No. 8, 2886, 02.04.2020.

Research output: Journal contributionsJournal articlesResearchpeer-review

Harvard

APA

Vancouver

Bibtex

@article{f05a988fa0be4bf491affc92273aab0d,
title = "Organizational health literacy in facilities for people with disabilities: First results of an explorative qualitative and quantitative study",
abstract = "To date, studies on individual and organizational health literacy (OHL) in facilities for people with disabilities are scarce. Thus, the aims of this study are (1) to adapt an existing instrument for measuring organizational health literacy (OHL), namely, the “Health literate health care organization scale” (HLHO-10), to the context of facilities for people with disabilities, (2) to quantitatively examine characteristics of OHL, and (3) to qualitatively assess the definition and role of OHL by interviewing managers and skilled staff. An online study in Germany with N = 130 managers and skilled staff in facilities for people with disabilities was conducted, using the adapted HLHO-10 questionnaire. Univariate analyses were applied. Qualitative content analysis was used to investigate interview data from N = 8 managers and skilled staff from N = 8 facilities for people with disabilities in Hesse, Germany. Quantitative results revealed that respondents reported a below-average level in HLHO-10, with the lowest level found in the attribute of participative development of health information. The qualitative findings showed a clear need for improved navigation to and in facilities. The quantitative and qualitative findings are mainly consistent. Future research and measures should focus on facilities for people with disabilities in order to strengthen the development of and access to target-group-specific health information, as well as to establish a health-literate working and living environment.",
keywords = "Health care organizations, Inclusion, Organizational health literacy, People with disabilities, Health sciences",
author = "Katharina Rathmann and Theres Vockert and Wetzel, {Lorena Denise} and Judith Lutz and Kevin Dadaczynski",
note = "Funding Information: Acknowledgments: We acknowledge support by the Open Access Publishing Fund of Hochschule Fulda–Fulda University of Applied Sciences. Funding Information: was provided by the Program “Internal Funding of Research” of the Fulda University of Applied Sciences for the research projects “GeKoMB–Gesundheitkompetenz von Menschen mit Behinderung in Leichter Sprache/Measuring Health Literacy in Easy Language among People with Disabilities” (2019–2020) and “Organisationale Gesundheitskompetenz in Einrichtungen der Eingliederungs- und Behindertenhilfe/HeaLO—Health Literate Organizations for People with Disabilities” (2020–2021). Publisher Copyright: {\textcopyright} 2020 by the authors. Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland.",
year = "2020",
month = apr,
day = "2",
doi = "10.3390/ijerph17082886",
language = "English",
volume = "17",
journal = "International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health",
issn = "1661-7827",
publisher = "MDPI AG",
number = "8",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Organizational health literacy in facilities for people with disabilities

T2 - First results of an explorative qualitative and quantitative study

AU - Rathmann, Katharina

AU - Vockert, Theres

AU - Wetzel, Lorena Denise

AU - Lutz, Judith

AU - Dadaczynski, Kevin

N1 - Funding Information: Acknowledgments: We acknowledge support by the Open Access Publishing Fund of Hochschule Fulda–Fulda University of Applied Sciences. Funding Information: was provided by the Program “Internal Funding of Research” of the Fulda University of Applied Sciences for the research projects “GeKoMB–Gesundheitkompetenz von Menschen mit Behinderung in Leichter Sprache/Measuring Health Literacy in Easy Language among People with Disabilities” (2019–2020) and “Organisationale Gesundheitskompetenz in Einrichtungen der Eingliederungs- und Behindertenhilfe/HeaLO—Health Literate Organizations for People with Disabilities” (2020–2021). Publisher Copyright: © 2020 by the authors. Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland.

PY - 2020/4/2

Y1 - 2020/4/2

N2 - To date, studies on individual and organizational health literacy (OHL) in facilities for people with disabilities are scarce. Thus, the aims of this study are (1) to adapt an existing instrument for measuring organizational health literacy (OHL), namely, the “Health literate health care organization scale” (HLHO-10), to the context of facilities for people with disabilities, (2) to quantitatively examine characteristics of OHL, and (3) to qualitatively assess the definition and role of OHL by interviewing managers and skilled staff. An online study in Germany with N = 130 managers and skilled staff in facilities for people with disabilities was conducted, using the adapted HLHO-10 questionnaire. Univariate analyses were applied. Qualitative content analysis was used to investigate interview data from N = 8 managers and skilled staff from N = 8 facilities for people with disabilities in Hesse, Germany. Quantitative results revealed that respondents reported a below-average level in HLHO-10, with the lowest level found in the attribute of participative development of health information. The qualitative findings showed a clear need for improved navigation to and in facilities. The quantitative and qualitative findings are mainly consistent. Future research and measures should focus on facilities for people with disabilities in order to strengthen the development of and access to target-group-specific health information, as well as to establish a health-literate working and living environment.

AB - To date, studies on individual and organizational health literacy (OHL) in facilities for people with disabilities are scarce. Thus, the aims of this study are (1) to adapt an existing instrument for measuring organizational health literacy (OHL), namely, the “Health literate health care organization scale” (HLHO-10), to the context of facilities for people with disabilities, (2) to quantitatively examine characteristics of OHL, and (3) to qualitatively assess the definition and role of OHL by interviewing managers and skilled staff. An online study in Germany with N = 130 managers and skilled staff in facilities for people with disabilities was conducted, using the adapted HLHO-10 questionnaire. Univariate analyses were applied. Qualitative content analysis was used to investigate interview data from N = 8 managers and skilled staff from N = 8 facilities for people with disabilities in Hesse, Germany. Quantitative results revealed that respondents reported a below-average level in HLHO-10, with the lowest level found in the attribute of participative development of health information. The qualitative findings showed a clear need for improved navigation to and in facilities. The quantitative and qualitative findings are mainly consistent. Future research and measures should focus on facilities for people with disabilities in order to strengthen the development of and access to target-group-specific health information, as well as to establish a health-literate working and living environment.

KW - Health care organizations

KW - Inclusion

KW - Organizational health literacy

KW - People with disabilities

KW - Health sciences

UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85084030527&partnerID=8YFLogxK

U2 - 10.3390/ijerph17082886

DO - 10.3390/ijerph17082886

M3 - Journal articles

C2 - 32331345

AN - SCOPUS:85084030527

VL - 17

JO - International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health

JF - International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health

SN - 1661-7827

IS - 8

M1 - 2886

ER -

Documents

DOI