TY - JOUR T1 - Health literacy and warfarin therapy at two anticoagulation clinics in Brazil JF - Heart JO - Heart SP - 1089 LP - 1095 DO - 10.1136/heartjnl-2016-310699 VL - 103 IS - 14 AU - Maria Auxiliadora Parreiras Martins AU - Josiane Moreira Costa AU - Juliana Vaz de Melo Mambrini AU - Antonio Luiz Pinho Ribeiro AU - Emelia J Benjamin AU - Luisa Campos Caldeira Brant AU - Michael K Paasche-Orlow AU - Jared W Magnani Y1 - 2017/07/01 UR - http://heart.bmj.com/content/103/14/1089.abstract N2 - Objective Health literacy has been related to health-related conditions and health outcomes. Studies examining the association of health literacy and anticoagulation have had variable results. We sought to investigate the relations of health literacy and percentage of time in therapeutic range (TTR) in a vulnerable Brazilian cohort at two hospital-based anticoagulation clinics.Methods We measured health literacy with the Short Assessment of Health Literacy for Portuguese-speaking Adults (SAHLPA-18) in 2015–2016. We identified the demographic and clinical characteristics associated with health literacy and related health literacy to TTR.Results We enrolled 422 adults prescribed chronic warfarin therapy in our observational study (median age 62.1 years; 58.8% women; monthly income $200.00). The prevalence of inadequate health literacy (score 0–14 points) was 72.3% with a median score of 12 (quartiles, Q1=10; Q3=15) on the SAHLPA-18. The median TTR was 66.1%. In the multivariable logistic analysis, cognitive impairment and assistance with taking warfarin were associated with inadequate health literacy. Prosthetic heart valves and more school years were associated with adequate health literacy. Our analyses showed no significant relation between health literacy and TTR, analysing health literacy as a categorical (adjusted OR 1.05; 95% CI 0.65 to 1.70) or continuous variable (Spearman’s coefficient 0.02; p=0.70).Conclusions Inadequate health literacy was highly prevalent in this impoverished Brazilian cohort receiving anticoagulation with warfarin. However, we did not identify an association between health literacy and TTR. Future investigations may consider the systemic factors that contribute towards successful anticoagulation outcomes for vulnerable patient cohorts with inadequate health literacy. ER -