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Quality of Available Cardiovascular Disease Knowledge Tools: A Systematic Review Cover

Quality of Available Cardiovascular Disease Knowledge Tools: A Systematic Review

Open Access
|Jul 2025

Abstract

Background: Cardiovascular disease (CVD) is the leading cause of morbidity and mortality. Most people can reduce their CVD risk through lifestyle improvements and medication. Having low health literacy is a barrier to CVD prevention and management and is associated with worse health outcomes. Knowledge is a key component of health literacy, but there is no standard way for clinicians to assess this to tailor education about CVD. The aim of this review was to identify available CVD knowledge tests and evaluate their quality.

Methods: Electronic database searches were conducted using Medline, CINAHL, PsycINFO and PsycTESTS between inception and October 2022. Identified tools were assessed using the Psychometric Grading Framework (PGF) to assess the quality of included tests.

Results: A total of 28 studies were identified, of which 18 were original test development papers and 10 were language translation papers. The five most common domains were CVD risk factors, nutrition, heart physiology, physical activity, and treatment options. Three papers achieved an A grading on the PGF. Only one test provided a guide to classify patients based on the results.

Conclusions: This review identified 15 additional knowledge assessment tools compared to previous research, including some available in multiple languages. Clinicians can access a wide range of CVD knowledge assessment tools to understand and respond to patient knowledge levels, but some are higher quality than others. Alternative tools may be needed to assess specific risk factor and condition knowledge. Further work is needed to tailor CVD knowledge tests for populations lower health literacy, and to validate the tests against health outcomes to improve clinical practice.

PROSPERO: CRD42022370227

What is Known:

  • Having low health literacy is associated with worse cardiovascular outcomes.
  • Knowledge is a key component of health literacy, but there is no standard way to assess this for CVD.
  • An assessment of the quality and reliability of CVD knowledge tests could support clinicians to tailor patient education to health literacy needs.

What the Study Adds:

  • We identified 15 additional tests development papers that were not captured in earlier reviews of CVD knowledge tests.
  • There are multiple high quality CVD knowledge tests available to clinicians, and tests available in different languages.
  • These tests may be used to tailor patient education to individual health literacy needs.
DOI: https://doi.org/10.5334/gh.1446 | Journal eISSN: 2211-8179
Language: English
Submitted on: Nov 13, 2024
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Accepted on: Jun 23, 2025
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Published on: Jul 9, 2025
Published by: Ubiquity Press
In partnership with: Paradigm Publishing Services
Publication frequency: 1 issue per year

© 2025 Michael A. Fajardo, Cassia Yung, Samuel Cornell, Rajesh Puranik, Anna L. Hawkes, Shiva Raj Mishra, Jenny Doust, Carissa Bonner, published by Ubiquity Press
This work is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 License.