Health Literacy: Strategies for Community Health Workers and Clients September 29, 2017

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Health Literacy: Strategies for Community Health Workers and Clients September 29, 2017 Liz Edghill, BA, RN, BSN, Manager of Refugee and Immigrant Services Kristin Munro-Leighton, BA, MPH, Health Education Coordinator

Discuss the definition of health literacy and why it is a problem. Identify strategies for clients and family members. Identify strategies for community health workers, health care providers, and health facilities. Practice the Teach-Back Method of instruction. Discuss resources to improve health literacy skills.

Definition and Scope of the Problem

The degree to which individuals have the capacity to obtain, process, communicate, and understand basic health information and services needed to make appropriate health decisions. SOURCE: Affordable Care Act, 2010

Fill out patient information and consent forms Follow treatment plans Read handouts, brochures, and news about health topics Figure out timing and dosage of medicines Follow cancer screening guidelines Use medical tools for personal care Figure out health insurance benefits Know where to go for appropriate care and much more

Your naicisyhp has dednemmocer that you have a ypocsonoloc. Ypocsonoloc is a test for noloc recnac. It sevlovni gnitresni a elbixelf gniweiv epocs into your mutcer. You must drink a laiceps diuqil the night before the noitanimaxe to clean out your noloc. SOURCE: http://www.healthed.com

You have a 1 in 10 chance of having Disease A, and a 1 in 20 chance of having Disease B in the next 10 years. SOURCE: http://www.healthed.com

You drink this whole bottle of soda. How many grams of total carbohydrates does it contain? SOURCE: Rothman R, Am J Prev Med, 2006

Take 2 tablets by mouth twice daily. SOURCE: http://www.healthed.com

Challenges for patients: Patient tasks for Diabetes follow up visit SOURCE: Integrating Health Literacy with Health Performance Management, IOM 2013

Patients with low health literacy: Use fewer preventative services Make more medication errors Make more visits to the ER Have more hospitalizations Have poorer health outcomes Have higher mortality rates AHRQ estimates the cost at $106 billion to $238 billion 17% of all U.S. personal health care expenditures SOURCE: Health Literacy Universal Precaution Toolkit, AHRQ 2006

36% of U.S. adults have Below Basic / Basic Health Literacy Below Basic (14%) Basic (22%) Intermediate (53%) Proficient (12%) SOURCE: http://nces.ed.gov/pubs2006/2002483.pdf

Age Ages 16 to 64 = about 30% Below Basic or Basic Age 65+ = 59% Below Basic or Basic Race / Ethnicity White = 28% Below Basic or Basic Black = 58% Below Basic or Basic Hispanic = 66% Below Basic or Basic SOURCE: http://nces.ed.gov/pubs2006/2002483.pdf

Education Less than or some high school = 76% Below Basic or Basic High school graduate or GED = 44% Below Basic or Basic 4-year college degree = 13% Below Basic or Basic Income level 150% of poverty or below = average score is Basic $34,575/family of 4 SOURCE: http://nces.ed.gov/pubs2006/2002483.pdf

Type of health insurance Medicare = 57% Below Basic or Basic Medicaid = 60% Below Basic or Basic No insurance = 53% Below Basic or Basic Other factors Current health status Experience with health care system Complexity of information SOURCE: http://nces.ed.gov/pubs2006/2002483.pdf

Everyone has problems with health literacy at some point.

Improve patient safety Improve quality of care Improve patient compliance with treatment plan Following prevention and screening recommendations Self-management of health conditions Correct use of medication Improve patient health

7 Strategies for Health Care Providers and Facilities

Assume everyone has difficulty with health information Create a safe and shame-free environment Offer help to everyone, regardless of appearance Provide patient-centered care

Greet patients warmly. Make eye contact. Use plain, non-medical language. Slow down. Limit content. Repeat key points. Use pictures, illustrations, and 3-D models.

SOURCE: http://www.healthed.com

SOURCE: http://www.healthed.com

Objectives Limit to 2-3 important points Layout One page vs. brochure Reading level Aim for 5 th to 6 th grade More tips Use short words and sentences Avoid medical jargon and idioms Limit fonts Leave white space Careful with images and pictures

Test written materials with your patients! Family Health Centers Patient Feedback Group Established in 2009; meets 4-6 times a year

Invite questions using body language Sit Look at your patient Show I have the time Try not to interrupt Ask for questions Ask What questions do you have?" NOT Do you have any questions? Patients will say no

Ask Me 3 National Patient Safety Foundation http://www.npsf.org/askme3/ What is my main problem? What do I need to do about it? Why is it important?

Question Builder Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality http://www.ahrq.gov/legacy/questions/qb/

Internet usage About 80% of internet users look for health information online Looking for health information is the 3 rd most popular online activity Symptoms and treatments dominate internet users health searches About 1 in 3 adults in the U.S. owns a smartphone Tell your patients Don t try to diagnose yourself! Don t Google it! Use websites that end with.edu,.org, or.gov Use caution with websites that end with.com Use caution with websites selling a product SOURCE: http://www.healthed.com

http://www.babycenter.com

http://www.medlineplus.gov

Immediately after leaving the doctor s office, patients forget 40-80% of what they heard. Almost 50% of what they do remember is wrong. SOURCE: http://www.healthed.com

Supported by AHRQ research Asking that patients recall and restate what they have been told was one of the 11 top patient safety practices based on the strength of scientific evidence. Healthy People 2020 objective Increase the proportion of persons who report their health care provider always asked them to describe how they will follow the instructions. SOURCE: Making Health Care Safer, AHRQ 2001

A chance to check for understanding and, if necessary, re-teach the information. Ask clients to repeat in their own words what they need to know or do. NOT a test of the client, but of how well you explained a concept. Can be used by any member of the health care team.

Throughout the visit: Chunk and Check Make a few points Summarize Check for understanding Repeat Replaces ending the visit with Do you understand? Clients will say YES! Do you have any questions? Clients will say NO!

I want to be sure I explained your medicine well. Can you tell me how you are going to take it? We covered a lot today about your diabetes and I want to make sure I explained things clearly. Let s go over what we discussed. What are three ways you can keep your diabetes under better control? We made a plan for getting your insurance changed can you tell me who you are going to call tomorrow and what you need from them?

Client perspective: Say it back At the end of the visit, say Okay, let me make sure I got everything. Restate your health problem Restate your treatment plans Take notes Follow up visit? Referral? Fill a prescription?

Imagine you are hearing this from your Community Health Worker. Imagine your health depends on understanding it.

Imagine 4 shapes in a row. You re going to imagine 3 circles and 1 square. The third figure from the right is shaded in. The figure to the left of the shaded figure is the square.

http://www.teachbacktraining.com

People are using a lot of prescriptions! 4 billion prescriptions filled at retail pharmacies in 2014 Age 45 64 uses average of 4.7 unique prescriptions a year Age 65 74 uses average of 6.3 unique prescriptions a year Patients with chronic conditions often use 10 or more SOURCE: Medical Expenditure Panel Survey, 2009; Kaiser Family Foundation; FDA

People are using a lot of OTCs! >300,000 OTC medicines available Most users assume all OTCs are safe and don t read instructions Most users are not aware of active ingredient or its importance Many users do not report use to their health provider SOURCE: Medical Expenditure Panel Survey, 2009; Kaiser Family Foundation; FDA

One medicine can be many sizes, colors, shapes, and names What do these pills have in common? Prescription instructions are impossible! SOURCE: Medical Expenditure Panel Survey, 2009; Kaiser Family Foundation

Low health literacy leads to Poorer understanding of medication names, indications, and instructions Poorer adherence to treatment regimens Nearly half of adults misunderstand Common dosing schedules Take two tablets by mouth twice daily Auxiliary warnings Do not chew or crush, swallow whole For external use only SOURCE: Role of Health Literacy in Patient Safety, AHRQ 2009

Remind clients to: Bring medicines to every visit Keep an updated list of their medicines Include OTCs, vitamins, and herbals Get to know their pharmacist and ask questions Know the what-why-when-and-how of their medicines What? Name of the medicine and what it looks like Why? Why they are taking it When? What time(s) of day should they take the medicine How? How much medicine to take each time(dosage). Whether to take it with food or on an empty stomach. How long to take the medicine. How it might affect them. How they will know it is working.

What is the ACA? Why do I have 2 cards? Where do I go for care? Will Repeal and Replace affect me? What is a MCO?

From Coverage to Care Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services https://marketplace.cms.gov/technicalassistance-resources/c2c.html

Resources and Training Tools

Institute of Medicine Roundtable on Health Literacy http://iom.nationalacademies.org/activities/publichealth/healthliter acy.aspx National Network of Libraries of Medicine http://nnlm.gov/outreach/consumer/hlthlit.html Harvard University School of Public Health Health Literacy Studies https://www.hsph.harvard.edu/healthliteracy/ Institute for Healthcare Advancement http://www.iha4health.org/health-literacy-resources/ Health Literacy Consulting www.healthliteracy.com

US DHHS Health Resources and Services Administration http://www.hrsa.gov/publichealth/healthliteracy/ Effective Communication Tools for Healthcare Professionals (free) Centers for Disease Control http://www.cdc.gov/healthliteracy/ Overview, Writing, Using Numbers, Creating Lists/Charts/Graphs, Speaking (free) Health Literacy activities by state AHRQ Health Literacy Universal Precautions Toolkit http://www.ahrq.gov/professionals/quality-patient-safety/qualityresources/tools/literacy-toolkit/index.html Practice/program assessment and toolkit

Health Literacy Kentucky http://www.healthliteracyky.org Tools for Teaching

Liz Edghill, Manager of Refugee and Immigrant Services (502) 744-6281 eaedghill@fhclouisville.org Kristin Munro-Leighton, Health Educator (502) 772-8588 kmunroleighton@fhclouisville.org