Health literacy in relation to web-based measurement of cognitive function in the home: UK Women’s Cohort Study

Objective Older adults may require additional support to comprehend written information due to inadequate health literacy, which involves components of cognitive function including reaction time. This study tested the acceptability of web-based reaction time testing in the UK Women’s Cohort Study an...

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Main Authors: Alan J Gow, Janet Cade, Darren C Greenwood, Gareth Hagger-Johnson, Stian Reimers
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: BMJ Publishing Group 2025-03-01
Series:BMJ Open
Online Access:https://bmjopen.bmj.com/content/15/3/e092528.full
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author Alan J Gow
Janet Cade
Darren C Greenwood
Gareth Hagger-Johnson
Stian Reimers
author_facet Alan J Gow
Janet Cade
Darren C Greenwood
Gareth Hagger-Johnson
Stian Reimers
author_sort Alan J Gow
collection DOAJ
description Objective Older adults may require additional support to comprehend written information due to inadequate health literacy, which involves components of cognitive function including reaction time. This study tested the acceptability of web-based reaction time testing in the UK Women’s Cohort Study and possible sources of bias. Additionally, it assessed the association between health literacy and reaction time.Design A cross-sectional analysis was conducted using data from the UK Women’s Cohort Study, a prospective cohort study.Participants The study involved women aged 48–85 without cancer registration who participated in the 2010/2011 follow-up (n=768).Setting Postal questionnaires and web-based cognitive function tests were administered in participants’ homes.Methods and analysis Logistic regression identified predictors of volunteering for reaction time testing, used to calculate inverse probability weights for the primary analysis. Associations between health literacy and reaction time were estimated with linear regression models, adjusting for volunteer effects. Poisson regression models assessed associations between health literacy and choice reaction time errors.Primary and secondary outcome measures The primary outcome was acceptability of web-based testing (response rate, task distress, task difficulty). Secondary outcomes were sources of volunteer bias and the association between health literacy and reaction time.Results Web-based testing of cognitive function was attempted by 67% of women (maximum age 80), with little distress or difficulty reported. There was substantive volunteer bias. Women providing data on cognitive function were younger, had higher educational attainment and were higher in self-rated intelligence. Inadequate health literacy was associated with making fewer choice reaction time errors among those providing valid data but was also associated with not providing valid data. Health literacy was not associated with other aspects of reaction time (speed, variability). Additionally, selection bias may have restricted range on study variables, given that 2010/2011 volunteers were younger and more educated compared with those at recruitment in 1995/1998.Conclusion Brief web-based measures of cognitive function in the home are acceptable to women aged 48–80, but there are substantive selection effects and volunteer biases. Additionally, there are potentially vulnerable subgroups who provide poorer quality data.
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spelling doaj-art-2cdc290fc60a4aa4b40ad0fdbb68ab2b2025-08-20T02:58:19ZengBMJ Publishing GroupBMJ Open2044-60552025-03-0115310.1136/bmjopen-2024-092528Health literacy in relation to web-based measurement of cognitive function in the home: UK Women’s Cohort StudyAlan J Gow0Janet Cade1Darren C Greenwood2Gareth Hagger-Johnson3Stian Reimers49 Centre for Cognitive Ageing and Cognitive Epidemiology, University of Edinburgh, Edinburgh, UKUniversity of Leeds, Leeds, UKAcademic Department of Rehabilitation Medicine, University of Leeds, Leeds, UK1Centre for Paediatric Epidemiology and Biostatistics, UCL Institute of Child Health, London, UK3 Department of Psychology, School of Health & Psychological Sciences, City St George’s, University of London, London, UKObjective Older adults may require additional support to comprehend written information due to inadequate health literacy, which involves components of cognitive function including reaction time. This study tested the acceptability of web-based reaction time testing in the UK Women’s Cohort Study and possible sources of bias. Additionally, it assessed the association between health literacy and reaction time.Design A cross-sectional analysis was conducted using data from the UK Women’s Cohort Study, a prospective cohort study.Participants The study involved women aged 48–85 without cancer registration who participated in the 2010/2011 follow-up (n=768).Setting Postal questionnaires and web-based cognitive function tests were administered in participants’ homes.Methods and analysis Logistic regression identified predictors of volunteering for reaction time testing, used to calculate inverse probability weights for the primary analysis. Associations between health literacy and reaction time were estimated with linear regression models, adjusting for volunteer effects. Poisson regression models assessed associations between health literacy and choice reaction time errors.Primary and secondary outcome measures The primary outcome was acceptability of web-based testing (response rate, task distress, task difficulty). Secondary outcomes were sources of volunteer bias and the association between health literacy and reaction time.Results Web-based testing of cognitive function was attempted by 67% of women (maximum age 80), with little distress or difficulty reported. There was substantive volunteer bias. Women providing data on cognitive function were younger, had higher educational attainment and were higher in self-rated intelligence. Inadequate health literacy was associated with making fewer choice reaction time errors among those providing valid data but was also associated with not providing valid data. Health literacy was not associated with other aspects of reaction time (speed, variability). Additionally, selection bias may have restricted range on study variables, given that 2010/2011 volunteers were younger and more educated compared with those at recruitment in 1995/1998.Conclusion Brief web-based measures of cognitive function in the home are acceptable to women aged 48–80, but there are substantive selection effects and volunteer biases. Additionally, there are potentially vulnerable subgroups who provide poorer quality data.https://bmjopen.bmj.com/content/15/3/e092528.full
spellingShingle Alan J Gow
Janet Cade
Darren C Greenwood
Gareth Hagger-Johnson
Stian Reimers
Health literacy in relation to web-based measurement of cognitive function in the home: UK Women’s Cohort Study
BMJ Open
title Health literacy in relation to web-based measurement of cognitive function in the home: UK Women’s Cohort Study
title_full Health literacy in relation to web-based measurement of cognitive function in the home: UK Women’s Cohort Study
title_fullStr Health literacy in relation to web-based measurement of cognitive function in the home: UK Women’s Cohort Study
title_full_unstemmed Health literacy in relation to web-based measurement of cognitive function in the home: UK Women’s Cohort Study
title_short Health literacy in relation to web-based measurement of cognitive function in the home: UK Women’s Cohort Study
title_sort health literacy in relation to web based measurement of cognitive function in the home uk women s cohort study
url https://bmjopen.bmj.com/content/15/3/e092528.full
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