2022
DOI: 10.3390/ijerph19126975
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Health Literacy in the Context of Implant Care—Perspectives of (Prospective) Implant Wearers on Individual and Organisational Factors

Abstract: The continuous development of medical implants offers various benefits for persons with chronic conditions but also challenges an individual’s, and the healthcare system’s, ability to deal with technical innovation. Accessing and understanding new information, navigating healthcare, and appraising the role of the implant in body perceptions and everyday life requires health literacy (HL) of those affected as well as an HL-responsive healthcare system. The interconnectedness of these aspects to ethically releva… Show more

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Cited by 4 publications
(9 citation statements)
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“…Lastly, as shown by Huebner et al [ 23 ], health literacy development will be increasingly related to ethical aspects, such as the dependence on technology to make “good” health decisions or the extent of actual responsibility of health professions and healthcare systems to support individuals in becoming health literate. To understand how health literacy and ethics are interrelated, the authors assess implant wearers’ perspectives on responsibilities and challenges when accessing and applying information and advice about the integration of (implant) technology in everyday life, as well as how individual skills, as well as a healthcare system’s responsiveness, impacts the dependence on a technological device.…”
Section: Articles In the Special Issuementioning
confidence: 99%
“…Lastly, as shown by Huebner et al [ 23 ], health literacy development will be increasingly related to ethical aspects, such as the dependence on technology to make “good” health decisions or the extent of actual responsibility of health professions and healthcare systems to support individuals in becoming health literate. To understand how health literacy and ethics are interrelated, the authors assess implant wearers’ perspectives on responsibilities and challenges when accessing and applying information and advice about the integration of (implant) technology in everyday life, as well as how individual skills, as well as a healthcare system’s responsiveness, impacts the dependence on a technological device.…”
Section: Articles In the Special Issuementioning
confidence: 99%
“…Here, health literacy (HL) could prove to be a beneficial factor for device management. Technology-related HL [ 131 ], as a ‘dimension upgrade’ on established models of HL and specification of digital HL, could serve as a contemporary add-on to this concept [ 18 ].…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Yet, such safety standards must be maintained for impaired persons without the absolute necessity of an implant or even nudging them to decide for an implant, potentially leading to ethical conflicts. In implant care, safety refers to the feeling of security concerning implant functionality and therefore feeling safe in everyday life [ 18 ].…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
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