Does health literacy affect the decision to have gestational diabetes screening test?

Authors

Özlem Özgün Uyanıklar, Zeliha Atak, Sakine Rahımlı Ocakoglu, Hatice Ortaç, Gökhan Ocakoğlu
https://doi.org/10.18621/eurj.1291335
Objectives: The main objective of this study is to assess the relationship between the level of Health Literacy and the patient's decision to refuse the Gestational diabetes mellitus screening test.
Methods: This cross-sectional study was conducted at a high-volume public hospital from March 2020 to September 2020 with women between 24-28 weeks of gestation. Demographic characteristics and gestational diabetes mellitus screening status were recorded for each woman. The European Health Literacy Survey Questionnaire was used to assess health literacy.
Results: A total of 364 women were included in the study. Two hundred and three (55.7%) women accepted the gestational diabetes mellitus screening test, and 44.2% did not. Health care, disease prevention, health promotion subscales, and the general scale scores were higher in the gestational diabetes mellitus screening group (p = 0.001, p = 0.024, p = 0.01, and p = 0.003, respectively). It was determined that a 1-point increase in the health care score decreased the probability of rejecting the gestational diabetes mellitus screening by 1.03 times (p = 0.003).
Conclusions: Lower health literacy levels were associated with higher rates of gestational diabetes mellitus screening test rejection.
Gestational diabetes, health literacy, surveys and questionnaires

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Uyanıklar Özlem Özgün, Atak Z, Rahımlı Ocakoglu S, Ortaç H, Ocakoğlu G. Does health literacy affect the decision to have gestational diabetes screening test?. Eur Res J. 2024;10(2):195-203. doi:10.18621/eurj.1291335

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Article Information

  • Article Type Research Article
  • Submitted February 21, 2026
  • Published March 3, 2024
  • Issue Vol. 10 No. 2 (2024)
  • Section Research Article
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