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70 The Effect of Executive Functioning on Predicting Health Literacy in a Memory Disorders Clinic

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  21 December 2023

Kyle J Jennette
Affiliation:
Department of Psychiatry, University of Illinois College of Medicine, Chicago, Illinois, USA.
Aya Haneda*
Affiliation:
Roosevelt University, Chicago, Illinois, USA
Jason R Soble
Affiliation:
Department of Psychiatry, University of Illinois College of Medicine, Chicago, Illinois, USA.
Zachary J Resch
Affiliation:
Department of Psychiatry, University of Illinois College of Medicine, Chicago, Illinois, USA.
*
Correspondence: Aya Haneda, Roosevelt University, Chicago, Illinois, USA, [email protected]
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Abstract

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Objective:

Health literacy is the degree to which an individual is able to attain, process, and understand information, skills, and services required to make informed decisions. Limited health literacy is a risk factor for problems understanding health information and adhering to medical instructions, underuse of preventive services, increased hospitalizations and associated medical costs, and higher mortality rates. Recognizing individuals with reduced health literacy can be difficult given demographic information such as age or years of education do not reliably reflect an individual’s health literacy level. Cross-sectional studies have identified limited health literacy as associated with lower scores on cognitive tests measuring memory, executive function (EF), and processing speed, independent from the influence of demographic variables (e.g., age, race, education). This study assessed the association of objective measures of executive functioning and health literacy when controlling for premorbid estimated intellectual functioning and relevant demographic variables.

Participants and Methods:

A sample of 44 adult patients (20 Male; 24 Female) referred for neuropsychological evaluation for memory complaints who were administered the Test of Premorbid Functioning (TOPF), and multiple measures of EF including the Trail Making Test - Part B (TMT-B), Stroop Color and Word Test (SCWT), and Letter (FAS) and Semantic (Animals) Fluency as part of part of a larger standardized battery. Patients were also administered the Short Assessment of Health Literacy-English (SAHL-E). All included patients had <2 performance validity test failures. The sample was 50% non-Hispanic Black, 31.8% non-Hispanic White, 15.9% Hispanic, 2.3% Asian/Pacific Islander, and 54.5% female. Diagnostically, 50.9% of the sample were cognitively normal, 36.4% had mild cognitive impairment, and 15.9% had dementia. Two multiple regressions were conducted to evaluate (1) the predictive power of EF on the SAHL-E, and (2) the moderating impact of estimated premorbid IQ and demographics via the TOPF on the relationship between EF and SAHL-E.

Results:

The first regression was not significant (p=.168) with FAS as the only independent predictor of SAHL-E performance (ß=.387, p<.05). The overall model was significant with the addition of the TOPF (p<.001). FAS accounted for 29% (ß=.336, p<.05) of the variance in SAHL-E when controlling for TOPF and other measures of EF.

Conclusions:

These results indicate that novel generativity is a significant predictor of health literacy beyond the influence of estimated premorbid intelligence and demographic factors. Importantly, these findings suggest that broadly speaking EF abilities have minimal impact on health literacy, although reduced verbal generativity to letter cues is associated with reduced health literacy. Identification of at-risk populations such as individuals with limited health literacy is clinically important and can make way for early intervention. Health information targeted at this at-risk population should go beyond vocabulary and more specifically reduce the burden on verbal fluency.

Type
Poster Session 03: Dementia | Amnesia | Memory | Language | Executive Functions
Copyright
Copyright © INS. Published by Cambridge University Press, 2023