Literacy, Language & Culture

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Literacy, Language & Culture & Preserving the Patient s Story Rebecca L. Sudore, MD Associate Professor of Medicine University of California, San Francisco San Francisco VA Medical Center

We Need Better Documentation 70% documentation of EOL wishes are missing from medical chart or wrong!! Heyland DK, et al., Failure to engage hospitalized elderly patients and their families in advance care planning. JAMA Intern Med. 2013 May 13;173(9):778-87

What Have We Learned? Literacy, language, and cultural needs to be addressed We need to confirm understanding of choices We need to document patients stories along with POLST and code status

Optimal POLST Flow Doctor initiates conversation Patient asks questions Patient identifies wishes Patient discusses wishes with surrogate Patient discusses wishes with doctor Patient has full understanding of choices Doctor documents code status, levels of care

Optimal POLST Flow Doctor initiates conversation Patient asks questions Patient identifies wishes Patient discusses wishes with surrogate Patient discusses wishes with doctor Patient tasks affected by: literacy language culture Patient has full understanding of choices Doctor documents code status, levels of care

Definition: What is Health Literacy? The degree to which individuals have the capacity to obtain, process, and understand basic health information and services needed to make appropriate heath decisions. IOM. Health literacy: a prescription to end confusion. 2004

Prevalence: Limited Literacy 22% (40-44 million) Level 1 < grade 4 -can t read signs, medication bottles, poison warnings, or city bus schedule Additional 25% (50 million) Level 2 = grade 4-8 -Difficulties with executive functions such as simple forms Average reading level = 8 th grade -Medicaid and the elderly = 5 th grade National Adult Literacy Survey: http://nces.ed.gov/naal/

Written Information Forms - 100% with inadequate literacy - 94% with marginal literacy - 17% with adequate literacy Did not understand the rights and responsibilities section of the Medicaid application Gazmararian JA, et. al., Health literacy among Medicare enrollees in a managed care organization. JAMA 1999 Ott BB et al., Readability of advance directive documents. Image J Nurs Sch. 1997

Written Information Forms - 100% with inadequate literacy - 94% with marginal literacy - 17% with adequate literacy Did not understand the rights and responsibilities section of the Medicaid application Advance Directive Forms and POLST - written beyond 12 th grade level Gazmararian JA, et. al., Health literacy among Medicare enrollees in a managed care organization. JAMA 1999 Ott BB et al., Readability of advance directive documents. Image J Nurs Sch. 1997

Issues Related to Language 55 million people in U.S. (~20%) speak language other than English at home 2007, US Census Bureau

Issues Related to Language 55 million people in U.S. (~20%) speak language other than English at home Lack of linguistically-appropriate materials 2007, US Census Bureau

Issues Related to Language Often experience poor communication Do not achieve rapport, or receive empathy, information, or encouragement to participate in decision-making. Worse if literacy + language barriers Often lack of appropriate interpreters - Pérez-Stable, EJ & Karliner, LS, What Do We Know About Patient Clinician Interactions. J Gen Intern Med 2012 - Sudore, et al., Unraveling the relationship between literacy, language proficiency, and patient-physician communication. Patient Educ Couns 2009 June - Schenker Y, et al., Navigating language barriers under difficult circumstances. Ann Intern Med. 2008 Aug

Issues Related to Culture Non-Western views on autonomy & decision making ~25% do not want to make own medical decisions Family decision making model Mistrust and perceived racism Minorities given less information by clinicians and less time for discussion often do not want to fill out forms - Crawley L, et al., Palliative and end-of-life care in the African American community. JAMA. 2000 - KwakJ, et al., Current research findings on EOL decision making among racially or ethnically diverse groups. Gerontologist. 2005 - Singh JA,et al., Preferred roles in treatment decision making among patients with cancer. Am J Manag Care. 2010 - Smith AK, et al. Palliative care for Latino patients and their families: whenever we prayed, she wept. JAMA. 2009 - Gordon HS, et al. Racial differences in doctors' information-giving and patients' participation. Cancer. 2006 - Rhodes R, Teno JM. What's race got to do with it? J Clin Oncol. 2009

What Have We Learned? Literacy, language, and cultural needs to be addressed We need to confirm understanding of choices We need to document patients stories along with POLST and code status

Need to Confirm Understanding: Informed Consent 1. Consent form written at 6 th grade reading level in English & Spanish 2. Read verbatim in English or Spanish 3. Knowledge assessment: 7 basic questions about consent content 4. Teach-to-goal : repeated, targeted education until comprehension was achieved Sudore RL, et al., Use of a modified informed consent process among vulnerable patients. J Gen Intern Med. 2006

Percent Number of Passes Required to Complete Consent Process 52% Worse if LIMITED: Literacy English-proficiency 28% 20% 1 2 3 Number of Passes Required N=205

Lessons Learned Interactive teach to goal process may be necessary for informed decision making Literacy and language need to be addressed

Uncertainty @ Hypothetical Scenarios

Uncertainty @ Hypothetical Scenarios 50% of diverse older adults who reported a treatment preference based on a hypothetical scenario were uncertain about their decision Uncertainty associated with: Limited literacy, lower education Latino, Asian/Pacific Islander, African Am. Poor health status Sudore RL & Schillinger D, et. al., J Health Comm. 2010 in press Allen RS. et.al., J Am Geriatr Soc, 2008; Volandes AE, et. al,. Med Decis Making. 2005

Lessons Learned Just because someone makes a choice does not mean they fully understand the meaning and ramifications Need to confirm understanding

Why Need to Confirm Understanding

Why Need to Confirm Understanding What does this mean to you? This means that I only want to be on machines for a few days. My family knows this.

Difficult for Clinicians to Interpret Checkboxes

Difficulty Interpreting checkboxes 85-year-old NH resident w/ dementia, broke hip. Pinning, may provide pain relief and maintenance of mobility. Dr. and daughter agree on comfort, not sure what plan will maximize comfort and quality of life. Smith AK, Lo B, Sudore R. When previously expressed wishes conflict with best interests. JAMA Intern Med. 2013

Forms and checkboxes No form or checkbox will ever eliminate the uncertainty and the complexity of the human condition. Nor does any one checkbox tell the patient s full story or ensure informed decision making

Preserving the Patient s Story How can we use documentation of patients stories for clinical care?

Example of a Patient s Story 93 yr old frail Filipino man with end stage CHF. He is unresponsive, going into respiratory failure. POLST says Attempt Resuscitation & Full Treatment EMS called. Transferred to hospital and ICU. Bipap is failing. Family has arrived. Now what?

Full Code: The Full Story Mr. D had been DNR/DNI for years until learned his petition to bring children from Philippines would die when he dies. He had 1 successful cardioversion for afib and has been on bipap. He is willing to try CPR & ventilation because of the petition, but only for a few days. He does not want to live on machines. If he cannot wake up, talk to or recognize his family, or get out of bed, life would not be worth living. He wants his family to know it is OK to stop the machines if he is suffering.

Documenting the Patient s Story Ensures we have captured the very information (patient s voice) that would help to inform complex ongoing decisions about care. Provides an anchor for ongoing discussions about goals, especially over multiple care transitions. The story describes the meaning behind patients choices & ensures choices are informed Regardless of literacy, language or culture Schenker Y, Smith AK, Sudore RL. Thinking Outside the Checkbox: Preserving the Patient s Story in Code Status Documentation. Submitted to Annals

How do we document patients stories in addition to POLST? Need interventions that take into account diverse populations with differing literacy, language, and cultural needs.

www.prepareforyourcare.org

PREPARE

Teaching Communication Skills California Coalition for Compassionate Care & California HealthCare Foundation Teach Respecting Choices Model with POLST

Communication & Checklists Checklist Theory Used in Creating End-of-Life Talk Guide. Boston Globe. June 19, 2013, 2013

Using the EMR: NYU & EPIC

http://www.mydirectives.com Registries & Technology

What Have We Learned? Literacy, language, and cultural needs to be addressed We need to confirm understanding of choices We need to document patients stories along with POLST and code status