Frontiers in Public Health (Dec 2023)

Supporting health education policies: translation, cross-cultural adaptation and validation of a health literacy instrument, in French

  • Céline Clément,
  • Céline Clément,
  • Virginie-Eve Lvovschi,
  • Virginie-Eve Lvovschi,
  • Elise Verot,
  • Elise Verot,
  • Elise Verot,
  • Benjamin du Sartz de Vigneulles,
  • Adeline Darlington-Bernard,
  • Denis Bourgeois,
  • Michel Lamure,
  • Flavia Vitiello,
  • Flavia Vitiello,
  • Claude Dussart,
  • Claude Dussart,
  • Florence Carrouel

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3389/fpubh.2023.1326771
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 11

Abstract

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BackgroundOral health is a fundamental human right and is inseparable and indivisible from overall health and well-being. Oral Health Literacy (OHL) has been proved to be fundamental to promoting oral health and reducing oral health inequalities. To our knowledge, no OHL instrument to evaluate OHL level is currently validated in French language despite the fact it is the fifth most widely spoken languages on the planet. The Oral health literacy Instrument (OHLI) appears to be the most interesting OHL instrument to adapt into French because it is already available in English, Spanish, Russian, Malaysian, and it contains both reading comprehension and numeracy sections. Its psychometric properties have been rated as adequate.ObjectiveThe aim of this study was to translate and adapt cross-culturally the OHLI into French, to evaluate its psychometric properties and to compare its results to oral health knowledge.MethodThis study followed and applied well-established processes of translation, cross-cultural adaptation and validation, based on the recommendations of the World Health Organization guidelines and on the Consensus-Based Standards for the Selection of Health Measurement Instruments (COSMIN) study design checklist for patient-reported outcomes. Two psychometric assessments were planned, the comparison of OHLI-F scores according to education level and frequency of dental visits, and the test–retest reliability of the OHLI-F.ResultsA total of 284 participants answered the OHLI-F. The OHLI-F scores were significantly different between participants with different levels of education and frequency of dental visits (p < 0.001). Participants with an education level lower than the baccalaureate, and those who never visit the dentist or only in case of pain, had significantly lower OHLI-F scores. Internal consistency was excellent (Cronbach’s alpha = 0.881–0.914). Test–retest reliability was very high (intraclass correlation = 0.985 to 0.996).ConclusionThe OHLI-F has demonstrated adequate psychometric properties and can therefore be used to measure oral health literacy in French-speaking populations.

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