Health and Financial Literacy and the Acquisition of COVID-19 Knowledge in Older Adults.

IF 2.2 3区 医学 Q2 GERONTOLOGY
Journal of Applied Gerontology Pub Date : 2025-01-01 Epub Date: 2024-06-17 DOI:10.1177/07334648241260223
Christopher C Stewart, Lei Yu, Maeve Byrne, Crystal M Glover, David A Bennett, Patricia A Boyle
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Knowledge about COVID-19 enters into many aspects of decision making, especially for older people who are at increased risk of severe disease or death. Yet little is known about the resources that supported older people's uptake of COVID-19 knowledge. Here, we hypothesized that higher pre-pandemic health and financial literacy was associated with higher COVID-19 knowledge. Participants were 434 community-based older people without dementia. COVID-19 knowledge was assessed via a 5-item measure, and health and financial literacy was assessed via a 32-item measure. In an ordinal regression model adjusted for age, gender, and education, higher literacy was associated with higher COVID-19 knowledge (p < .0001), and this association persisted after further adjusting for robust measures of global cognition or one of five specific cognitive domains (all p's ≤ .0001). These findings suggest that literacy plays a key role in supporting older people's acquisition of impactful knowledge in the real world.

老年人的健康和财务知识以及 COVID-19 知识的获取。
有关 COVID-19 的知识涉及决策的许多方面,尤其是对于面临严重疾病或死亡风险的老年人而言。然而,人们对支持老年人吸收 COVID-19 知识的资源知之甚少。在此,我们假设大流行前较高的健康和财务知识水平与较高的 COVID-19 知识水平相关。参与者为 434 名社区老年人,均无痴呆症。COVID-19知识由5个项目组成,健康和金融知识由32个项目组成。在对年龄、性别和教育程度进行调整后的序数回归模型中,较高的文化程度与较高的 COVID-19 知识相关(p < .0001),而且在进一步调整全球认知或五个特定认知领域之一的稳健测量后,这种关联仍然存在(所有 p 均小于 .0001)。这些研究结果表明,读写能力在支持老年人获取现实世界中有影响力的知识方面发挥着关键作用。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
5.10
自引率
13.30%
发文量
202
期刊介绍: The Journal of Applied Gerontology (JAG) is the official journal of the Southern Gerontological Society. It features articles that focus on research applications intended to improve the quality of life of older persons or to enhance our understanding of age-related issues that will eventually lead to such outcomes. We construe application broadly and encourage contributions across a range of applications toward those foci, including interventions, methodology, policy, and theory. Manuscripts from all disciplines represented in gerontology are welcome. Because the circulation and intended audience of JAG is global, contributions from international authors are encouraged.
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