Date post: | 28-Dec-2015 |
Category: |
Documents |
Upload: | isabella-morrison |
View: | 220 times |
Download: | 3 times |
Health Literacy & Health Disparities
Jann Keenan, Ed.S.
DC Convention Center, May 20, 2008
The travesty of health care disparities
“It’s intolerable that a in nation as wealthy as ours, there are people who cannot get
the right care at the right time” Richard Carmona, June 14, 2003 AMA House of Delegates Meeting)
Today’s Goals
After today’s talk you will walk away with… Part 1: An understanding of the impact of low
health literacy on health outcomes Part 2: Next steps you can take to get a health
literacy initiative going in your area. To get providers on board.
Which is the biggest predictor of a person’s health status?
Age Income Literacy Skills Job status Education Racial or ethnic group
Literacy skills— yep! How well you can read and understand!
Greater % of ethnic groups and seniors
The majority of those with low literacy skills in the United States are white, native-born Americans
Yet ethnic minority groups and seniors are disproportionately affected by low literacy.(the Center for Health Care Strategies)
The numbers = real people
50% of Hispanic Americans 40% of African Americans 33% of Asian Americans
66% of US adults age 60 plus
Here in the District
Literacy skills substantially lower than those in the US overall1
36% of DC adults have functional illiteracy versus 21% nationally.
Translation: 1 in 3 in DC versus 1 in 5 in the Nation)
(FI means trouble with bus schedules, reading maps, filling out job applications) 2
1 DC State of the Workforce Report, 2003 2 Phase 1 of the 2204 Study by State Education Agency
One contributor from report
Growing number of Hispanic and Ethiopian residents who are not proficient in English
Leap to Functional Health Literacy
The degree to which individuals have the capacity to obtain, process, and understand basic health information and services needed to make appropriate health decisions. (IOM and Parker)
In plain English . . .
A person ability to understand and act on health information.
We’re All at Risk . . .
People of all ages, races, incomes and education levels are challenged by low health literacy. The accountant who can’t fill out insurance
forms The provider who speaks “medicalese” Anyone who doesn’t know “take on an empty
stomach” or “light snack” means
Still . . . at most risk . . .
Economically disadvantaged Older adults Chronically ill most at risk (Prudential study) Ethnic groups. African Americans and HPB,
sleep problems, heart attack, stroke. Latinos and diabetes.
Widespread problem
Low health literacy is a threat to the health and well-being of Americans!
Many patients don’t understand the best way to take care of themselves and prevent disease.
When Patients Don’t Understand. . .
People with limited literacy skills: Have poorer overall health
Use health services more often
Are less likely to go to screenings
Are more likely to be hospitalized
Seek treatment in later stages of disease
Have less understanding of their treatment and less adherence to medical regimes
Significant relationship between good health and literacy Adults with lower-than-average reading skills
are less likely to get Screening tests such as mammograms and
Pap smears Flu shots and pneumonia vaccines Their kids to well child visits and more . .
.
Surprising Stats
2,659 patients were surveyed On an empty stomach--1,100 off base Next appointment--691 perplexed Upper GI tract XRay--886 in the dark Informed consent form--1,582 didn’t get it
This?
Or this?
Lofty materials/not speaking to culture
When low-income Hispanic and African American women got culturally appropriate materials/easy-reads- smoking during and after pregnancy went down! (Lillington, 1995)
SNAP (Stanford Nutrition Action Program) worked for people with low-literacy. More diet changes!
23 folks with low-literacy and heart failure had 100% weigh in compared to 32% without easy-to-read materials
When materials and information are not clear 75 African American women being treated for
HPB (CDC. 1990) 54 said they had “pressure trouble” or
“pressure” 32 believed they had 2 diseases
“High-blood” a disease where the blood was too “hot” “rich” or “thick.
“High-pertension” a condition where blood would “shoot up “ toward their head when they were emotionally excited and “fall back” as they calmed
For the 32 women using folk meds
The treatment for the “high blood” lemon juice, vinegar, or garlic water to “cool
and thin” their blood so it would drop t o the lower level in the body
The treatment for the High-pertension lower stress by not eating pork, hot, or spicy
foods, or grease Message to providers-listen about folk
medicine. Have respect . . .
Low health literacy is a threat to the well-being on the medical system
REPORT: Low Health Literacy: Implications for National Health Policy
$106-$236 per year. U of CT in Oct 2007
Adequate health literacy
Essential to promoting good health—especially in preventing disease
Instead of helping folks stay healthy . . .
We treat them when they are sick . . . Well, sometimes
Review and take aways from Part 1
Most materials are lofty and not culturally relevant. (Grade 10 or above. Nearly 1 out of 2 US adults read at grade 8 or lower)
Ineffective communication and low health literacy combine to affect patient safety and health outcomes.
Everyone is at risk- yet ethnic groups, chronically ill, poorer, and older adults at most risk!
On to Part 2-The Best Part
Turning the tide! Some Solutions!
What providers can do
Slow down.
Use analogies
Use “living room” language Benign = not cancer Lateral = side Anaphylactic reaction = shock, throat closing Oral= by mouth Monitor = watch Hypertension = blood pressure
And there’s more . . .
Limit information given at one time. Repeat and rephrase
Show or draw pictures Use “teach back” or “show me” Be respectful, welcoming, and caring
Consider culture “saving my last nerve” “falling out” “evil” on the “down low. low ”
Ethno-medicine—herbs. Spirit moves me. Encourage questions.
The Outcome? A way to empower patients toparticipate in their own health care
What communities can do
Transformational change through “Community Youth Mapping”
In the selected cities, youth help determine:
1. How many people in the community have problems with health literacy
2. Where the average person can go to get help understanding their health paperwork
3. If doctors & hospitals have support in creating health literate materials
4. If pharmacies have programs to help
people understand their medicines
5. If written materials are tested in the community
6. If adult literacy programs include
health lit examples
Who can help make a change in the community?
Adult end classes can add health content to their adult literacy classes.
Elder organizations can help senior citizens understand their medicines & provide tools to remember when to take meds
More ways!
Patient advocacy groups can provide tools to prepare for a doctor's visit
Local advertising & marketing agencies can volunteer their services to test print materials for readability & comprehension.
Health professionals collaborate in Detroit Michigan Dept of Community Health (2003) Employed cultural competency and health
literacy techniques 92% of docs are Caucasian and Asian/PI Difficulty in effective cross cultural
communication Established a “shame-free” environment
AMA.ORG for Tool Kit- 35 bucks
Free, free, & low fee for Ask Me 3www.npsf.org
1. What is my main problem?
2. What do I need to do?
3.Why is it important for me to do
this?
The “Ask me 3” questions
www.niapublications.org
Safe Use of Medicines—FREE!Take your medicines the right way - each day! An easy-to-read booklet from the National Institute on Aging.This booklet offers practical tips to make sure you are taking all your medicines the right way:
• Medicine safety
• How to stay on track and get the best results from your medicines
• Questions you should ask your doctor and pharmacist
More patient centered communications www.jointcommission.org
What did the doctor say? White paper 2/07 describes interventions to improve the ability of patients to understand complex medical info.
Hospitals, Language, and Culture.3/07 Report recommends strategies of 60 US hospitals providing health care to diverse populations.
Speak Up Program 3/02 with Brochures on surgical safety, infection, preventing med mistakes, patients rights.
Joint Commission & Iowa Health System Grant proposal in review At the NIH To develop new evidence-based performance
measure To provide critical information about how well
hospitals address the health literacy needs of patients.
To review next steps
Doctors can improve communication by looking to Ask Me 3 and AMA tool kit.
Communities can seek grants for community youth mapping.
Can get freebies from the Gov’t and the Joint Commission and Gov’t.
Can look at best practice & do it! Can encourage more funding for literacy
programs to include health teachings
Bottom line
Each one- Teach one Spread the word!