Objective: To determine whether explaining the causal links between illness management and symptom reduction would help younger and older adults learn and apply health information. Method: Ninety younger and 51 older adults read about a fictitious disease with or without explanations about the cause-and-effects (causal information) of illness management. A knowledge test (applied vs. factual items) was administered immediately and 1-week following the presentation of health booklets. Reading comprehension, working memory and health literacy were assessed as covariate variables. Results: Younger adults outperformed older individuals on the applied and factual items at both time points. After controlling for covariates, causal information fac...
Background: There is little evidence based research available on how the elderly population learn be...
Background: disease often confounds the identification of risk factors for age-associated cognitive ...
OBJECTIVE:Health literacy is critical for understanding information from health-care providers and c...
Abstract It is somewhat paradoxical that few patient education interventions actually consider the p...
Introduction. Creating heatlh literacy is a new concept in the field of health promotion, which impl...
This article is free to read on the publishers website Purpose of the Study: Health literacy is asso...
Purpose of the Study: Health literacy is associated with health outcomes presumably because it influ...
Background: Older people are more likely to have poorer health literacy skills, experience more hea...
This report examines health literacy in detail. How do patients and carers learn about disease manag...
Medical myth-busting is a common health education strategy during which a health educator highlights...
Contains fulltext : 58339.pdf (publisher's version ) (Closed access)The aim of thi...
Item does not contain fulltextIllness cognitions are mediators between illness and well-being in pat...
Background Interest in the role of patient education sessions for optimizing the management of heart...
BACKGROUNDChronic diseases are increasing worldwide and have become a significant burden to those af...
Health literacy refers to the ability to read, understand and use health information to maintain or ...
Background: There is little evidence based research available on how the elderly population learn be...
Background: disease often confounds the identification of risk factors for age-associated cognitive ...
OBJECTIVE:Health literacy is critical for understanding information from health-care providers and c...
Abstract It is somewhat paradoxical that few patient education interventions actually consider the p...
Introduction. Creating heatlh literacy is a new concept in the field of health promotion, which impl...
This article is free to read on the publishers website Purpose of the Study: Health literacy is asso...
Purpose of the Study: Health literacy is associated with health outcomes presumably because it influ...
Background: Older people are more likely to have poorer health literacy skills, experience more hea...
This report examines health literacy in detail. How do patients and carers learn about disease manag...
Medical myth-busting is a common health education strategy during which a health educator highlights...
Contains fulltext : 58339.pdf (publisher's version ) (Closed access)The aim of thi...
Item does not contain fulltextIllness cognitions are mediators between illness and well-being in pat...
Background Interest in the role of patient education sessions for optimizing the management of heart...
BACKGROUNDChronic diseases are increasing worldwide and have become a significant burden to those af...
Health literacy refers to the ability to read, understand and use health information to maintain or ...
Background: There is little evidence based research available on how the elderly population learn be...
Background: disease often confounds the identification of risk factors for age-associated cognitive ...
OBJECTIVE:Health literacy is critical for understanding information from health-care providers and c...