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Journal Article

Citation

Pithara C. Glob. Health Promot. 2019; ePub(ePub): ePub.

Affiliation

Population Health Sciences, Bristol Medical School, University of Bristol, UK.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2019, International Union for Health Promotion and Education, Publisher SAGE Publishing)

DOI

10.1177/1757975919878151

PMID

31825271

Abstract

Health literacy has gained popularity as a useful concept to promote and protect health. Even though health literacy research has been prolific it has also been fragmented, facing challenges in achieving its empowerment and social justice-related aims. Crucial limitations make the application of its principles to the health of vulnerable and underrepresented groups problematic, even though these groups are disproportionately affected by ill health. Efforts to refine and make the concept more relevant have tended to expand health literacy models and situate health literacy 'in context' to reflect environmental and social factors shaping health literacy. Context-related factors however, have not been consistently embedded in operationalisation and measurement efforts. This paper argues for health literacy to be re-conceptualised through a capabilities approach lens. It proposes that the capabilities approach can uniquely address the conceptual and methodological criticisms applied to health literacy, whilst encompassing its critical conceptual understandings of health. The advantage of this approach over and above other developments in health literacy theory and practice is its focus on both people's opportunities or freedoms to achieve desired health-related aims, and their ability to do so. It enables shifting the focus away from health literacy as individual skills and competencies and towards the enabling or inhibiting factors shaping health literacy. A participatory approach is seen as essential for realising this conceptual shift.


Language: en

Keywords

capabilities approach; community health literacy; critical health literacy; empowerment; health capability; migrant and minority ethnic health; participatory approaches; social justice

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