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Health Literacy Level of Patients with Diabetic Retinopathy: An Observational Descriptive Cross Sectional Study


Afaf Hassan Rashwan
Sayed Abass Sayed
Amal Abd El Fatah Abd El Hamed

Abstract

Background: Diabetic health literacy, encompassing knowledge, motivation, and the ability to access, understand, evaluate, and apply  healthcare information, is a crucial non-clinical factor in diabetes management.


Objective: To evaluate the health literacy levels in  diabetic patients and its impact on retinal health, including a complete epidemiological profile of the participants.


Subjects and Methods:  This observational descriptive cross-sectional study included 500 Egyptian diabetic patients attending the Ophthalmology  outpatient clinic at Al-Azhar University Hospitals from November 2022 to September 2023. Participants underwent a comprehensive  evaluation including a specially designed questionnaire based on the European Health Literacy Survey (HLS-EU), thorough medical  history, complete ophthalmological examination, fundus photography, and laboratory tests as needed.


Results: There was a statistically  significant correlation between health literacy levels and education, BMI, treatment compliance, and the presence of retinopathy (p<0.05).  Among the patients, 320 (64%) had no retinopathy. The percentage of patients with adequate health literacy (excellent and  sufficient) was 44.6%, while 55.4% had inadequate health literacy (problematic and inadequate). In patients with diabetic retinopathy,  only 22.8% had adequate health literacy. For those with severe diabetic retinopathy, the percentage dropped to 9.2%. Among patients  without diabetic retinopathy, 57% had adequate health literacy, whereas 43% had inadequate levels.


Conclusion: Health literacy is  significantly associated with diabetic retinopathy, treatment compliance, BMI, and education levels in diabetic patients. 


Journal Identifiers


eISSN: 2090-7125
print ISSN: 1687-2002