Health literacy in e-oncology care: challenges and strategies
Hajar Hasannejadasl, Cheryl Roumen, Yolba Smit, Andre Dekker, Rianne, Fijten

TL;DR
This paper discusses the challenges of low health literacy in e-oncology, emphasizing the importance of simple communication, visual aids, and decision tools to improve patient understanding and involvement in cancer care decisions.
Contribution
It highlights effective strategies like data visualization and decision aids to address health literacy barriers in digital oncology care.
Findings
Identifying patients with low HL improves communication.
Simple data visualizations aid patient understanding.
Using decision aids supports shared decision making.
Abstract
Given the impact of health literacy (HL) on patients outcomes, limited health literacy (LHL) is a major barrier in cancer care globally. HL refers to the degree in which an individual is able to acquire, process and comprehend information in a way to be actively involved in their health decisions. Previous research found that almost half of the population in developed countries have difficulties in understanding health related information. With the gradual shift toward the shared decision making (SDM) process and digital transformation in oncology, the need for dealing with low HL issues is more crucial. Decision making in oncology is often accompanied by considerable consequences on patients lives, which requires patients to understand complex information and be able to compare treatment methods by considering their own values. How health information is perceived by patients is…
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Taxonomy
TopicsHealth Literacy and Information Accessibility
