Communicating with Caregivers: Health Literacy, Plain Language, and Teachback

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Communicating with Caregivers: Health Literacy, Plain Language, and Teachback Sue Stableford, MPH, MSB, Director UNE Health Literacy Institute Alzheimer s Conference: Preparing for the Future

Disclosure The speaker is an employee of the University of New England and is provided partial salary support through federal HRSA grant #UP4HP19207-03 to the UNE-Maine Geriatric Education Center. The speaker does not receive any extra compensation for this presentation and has no other financial or academic conflicts of interest to declare.

Preview Introduction: Communication caregivers, and care providers Literacy and Health literacy Plain language Teachback Why it all matters Patients,

Questions this story raises What is Alzheimer s? Can it be treated? How is the disease going to affect my father? Will I be able to care for him? Where can I go for help?

Caregivers look to us for help Caregivers Adult children Spouses, partners Community helpers Care providers communicate to: Ask, diagnose Explain Teach Plan Recommend, refer

Medical and public health language can overwhelm caregivers Do you use these words? Dementia Cognitive decline Risk factor Progressive disease Degenerative disorder Neurotransmitter Beta-amyloid plaque

Keep health literacy in mind Adult abilities to Read Write Compute Understand Communicate Use health information

Literacy skills of American adults 43% Basic or below basic prose literacy skills 55% Basic or below basic numeracy skills Health literacy skills: Only 12% Proficient

Most vulnerable population groups Adults who are: Older (esp. ages 65+) Hispanic/Latino Immigrants Poor Managing a chronic physical or mental health condition

Health literacy affects everyone Limited knowledge skills resilience Often, poor health vision or hearing support system

What do health systems demand? Caregivers expected to manage: Insurance System navigation Medical appointments Treatment regimens Their own health Shared decision making And?

Re-Defining Health Literacy Consumer Literacy Skills Health Literacy Challenge Complex Health Systems Adapted from IOM conceptual framework in Health Literacy: A Prescription to End Confusion, 2003

The Communication Gap Consumer Skills vs System Demands Average literacy skills about grade 7/8 Most health information at reading level 10 + Verbal teaching too fast in a foreign language

Impact: Serious for patients Research studies Patients with limited literacy skills: Low understanding of health information Knowledge and uneven adherence in managing chronic conditions poor outcomes Knowledge and likelihood of getting preventive care Hospitalizations, costs, and deaths

Impact: Serious for systems Increased System Risk Missed appointments; cancelled procedures Callbacks/Time to repeat instructions Medicare refusal to pay Missed prevention opportunities

What works to address the problem? 2 evidence-based solutions Plain language Teachback

Plain language: More than words Content Limited, reader-focused, culturally inclusive Organization/structure Key actions (behaviors)up front Information chunked and titled Writing Clear, using simple terms and proven techniques Design Effective in visually supporting key messages

Text organized and visually structured for fast access

Well designed charts and a thesaurus guide readers

Another example: Text and chart designed for fast, easy access

Solution 2: Teachback or Guided Imagery Assures understanding of verbal teaching Clinician or staff teaches Patient or caregiver tells or demonstrates Clinician re-teaches as needed Chunk - check - chunk Show me Teach to goal

Do solutions work? Evidence says yes but Understanding with better material design Understanding with professional support More research needed

Myths and Truths Myth: We ll dumb everything down. Fact: Our tone determines how we sound. Myth: Plain language will insult adults. Fact: Most adults want quick, clear help. Myth: Plain language creates legal risk. Fact: Plain language protects organizations. Myth: Plain language is just common sense. Fact: Plain language takes skill and practice.

A Model of Success Bottle flat for reading ease Drug name big and bold Directions right away Key info stays with bottle Cap color coded by family member

Worth the effort? Consider: Population trends Alzheimer s trends Health delivery trends Accreditation requirements Safety and quality of care Costs

Final Words: Richard Carmona, M.D. The poor state of health literacy in America is a crisis...without addressing health literacy, we will not be able to respond adequately to such health concerns as obesity, diabetes, heart disease, and cancer We need to reach beyond the walls of our iatroculture and drop the medical jargon. We can communicate in plain simple terms and take the time to confirm comprehension. J Gen Intern Med 2006