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What Is the Evidence on Existing Policies and Linked Activities and Their Effectiveness for Improving Health Literacy at National, Regional and: Organ
Contributor(s): Who Regional Office for Europe (Author)
ISBN: 9289053194     ISBN-13: 9789289053198
Publisher: World Health Organization
OUR PRICE:   $22.80  
Product Type: Paperback
Published: August 2018
Qty:
Temporarily out of stock - Will ship within 2 to 5 weeks
Additional Information
BISAC Categories:
- Medical | Health Policy
- Medical | Public Health
- History | Europe - General
Series: Health Evidence Network Synthesis Report
Physical Information: 48 pages
 
Descriptions, Reviews, Etc.
Publisher Description:
The report identifies policies and other relevant documents through an evidence review of peer-reviewed and grey literature, supplemented by an inquiry of experts in health, health literacy and policy in the Region and by health literacy policies included in the most recent peer-reviewed document on health literacy activities published in the Region (European Union (EU) countries only: HEALIT4EU). Further efforts to identify policies from countries of the Commonwealth of Independent States were unfruitful.

Based on this evidence synthesis, the following policy considerations are proposed:
- consider the existing policies and related activities gathered in this review to develop or enhance health literacy policies and related activities to benefit citizens, patients and communities;
- broaden the range of areas of activity required for holistic health literacy policies to include the lived environment, the workplace, the media and digital/e-health, at all societal levels: individual, community, organization and system (legislative);
- strengthen the evidence base for health literacy at all societal levels to ensure that policies address needs specific to the national or local context;
- incorporate robust qualitative and quantitative evaluations into health literacy policies and interventions; quantitative methods could include pre- and post-activity health literacy evaluations of evidence of health, social and economic effects at all levels; and incorporate facilitators of successful implementation, such as intersectoral working, political leadership and strategies to overcome cultural barriers, into health literacy policy.

Member States would benefit from adopting such comprehensive frameworks and using metrics to design effective policies that support the development of a health-literate Europe.

Contributor Bio(s): Who Regional Office for Europe: - WHO Regional Office for Europe