Impact of health literacy and general self-efficacy on surgical outcomes 2 years after bariatric surgeryShow others and affiliations
2025 (English)In: Clinical Obesity, ISSN 1758-8103, E-ISSN 1758-8111, article id e70009Article in journal (Refereed) Epub ahead of print
Abstract [en]
After bariatric surgery, adherence to lifestyle recommendations is crucial. Health literacy and self-efficacy may impact recovery after surgery. In this multicentre study performed in three hospitals in Sweden, we evaluated any relation between preoperative health literacy and general self-efficacy on the one side and weight loss, health-related quality of life, length of stay, and complications up to 2 years after bariatric surgery on the other. Of 686 included patients, 56% (n = 382) had limited functional health literacy, 42% (n = 278) had limited communicative and critical health literacy, and 40% (n = 266) reported low general self-efficacy. Preoperative functional, communicative and critical health literacy, and general self-efficacy were not associated with the degree of weight loss at 1 or 2 years after surgery. However, limited health literacy and low general self-efficacy scores were associated with both reduced quality of life and obesity-related problems postoperatively. Further, a higher proportion of those with inadequate health literacy had a prolonged length of stay. Although patients with limited health literacy and self-efficacy may experience similar maximum weight loss after bariatric surgery as other patients, they still might have reduced health-related quality of life in terms of obesity-related problems. Increased awareness of this association as well as patient-centered support before and after bariatric surgery may be of benefit.
Place, publisher, year, edition, pages
2025. article id e70009
Keywords [en]
bariatric surgery, health literacy, self‐efficacy
National Category
Nursing
Identifiers
URN: urn:nbn:se:oru:diva-119830DOI: 10.1111/cob.70009PubMedID: 40059585OAI: oai:DiVA.org:oru-119830DiVA, id: diva2:1943745
Funder
Region Örebro County, OLL-886141Region Örebro County, OLL-935386Region Örebro County, OLL-960506Örebro University, ORU 2018/00376Örebro University, ORU 2018/2019Region Örebro County, OLL-939106
Note
Maria Jaensson: This study was financed by grants from the Swedish State under the ALF agreement between the Swedish government and the county councils (OLL-886141, OLL-935386, and OLL-960506); and from Örebro University (grant numbers ORU 2018/00376 and ORU 2018/2019). Erik Stenberg: This study was financed by grants from the Swedish State under the ALF agreement between the Swedish government and the county councils (OLL-939106): The Bengt Ihre Foundation. Anders Thorell: This study also received financial support from The Erling-Persson Foundation (Grant # 2019020).
2025-03-112025-03-112025-03-12Bibliographically approved