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Health Impact of Low Literacy & Partnering to Address Solutions . Paul D. Smith, MD, Associate Professor UW Department of Family Medicine Paul.Smith@fammed.wisc.edu. Topics today. Social determinants of health Impact of literacy on health and health care Collaboration in Wisconsin
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Health Impact of Low Literacy & Partnering to Address Solutions Paul D. Smith, MD, Associate Professor UW Department of Family Medicine Paul.Smith@fammed.wisc.edu
Topics today • Social determinants of health • Impact of literacy on health and health care • Collaboration in Wisconsin • Policy issues to consider
Social Determinants of Health • Social determinants of health • Impact of literacy on health and health care • Collaboration in Wisconsin • Policy issues to consider
In Their Own Words • Insert video clip here
How Age Effects NALS Data • Adults age 60 and over • Living in households or prisons • 68-80% are in Level 1 and 2 • More in Level 1 and 2 with advancing age • 89-99% Level 1 and 2 age 80 and over
Literacy Levels Change with Age BUT, they do not recognize their problem Age 60 and older • 91% Read well or very well • 88% Write well or very well • 83% Do arithmetic well or very well
NAAL Health Literacy Assessment • Basic and Below Basic by education level • In High School, GED or HS grad 34-37% • Less than/some High School 76%
NAAL Health Literacy Assessment • Basic and Below Basic by Self-reported health status • Excellent 25% • Very Good 28% • Good 43% • Fair 63% • Poor 69%
The Impact of Low Literacy on Health • Poorer health knowledge • Poorer health status • Higher mortality • More hospitalizations • Higher health care costs
Poorer Health Knowledge • Understanding prescription labels • 395 patients • 19% low literacy (6th grade or less) • 29% marginal literacy (7-8th grade) • 52% adequate literacy (9th grade and over) • 5 prescription bottles Literacy and Misunderstanding Prescription Labels. Davis et al. Ann Intern Med 2006;145:887-894
Poorer Health Knowledge • At least one incorrect • 63% low literacy • 51% marginal literacy • 38% adequate literacy Literacy and Misunderstanding Prescription Labels. Davis et al. Ann Intern Med 2006;145:887-894
Poorer Health Knowledge “Take two tablets twice daily” Stated correctly Demonstrated correctly 71% low literacy 35% 84% marginal literacy 63% 89% adequate literacy 80% “Show me how many pills you would take in one day.” Counted out 4 tablets-correct
Poorer Health Status • 2923 new Medicare enrollees • Inadequate literacy had increased frequency of: • Diabetes • Hypertension • Heart failure • Arthritis
Poorer Health Status • Medical Outcomes Study (SF-36) • Inadequate literacy had • Decreased: • Physical function • Mental health • Increased • Limitations in activity due to physical health • Pain that interferes with normal work activities
Poorer Health Status Diabetics with retinopathy 36% 19%
Increased Mortality • Age 70-79 • Reading level 8th grade or less • Five Year Prospective Study Sudore R, et al. Limited Literacy and Mortality in the Elderly. J Gen Intern Med 2006; 21:806-812.
Increased Mortality Risk of Death Hazard ratio: 1.75
More Hospitalizations 2 year hospitalization rate for patients visiting ED 31% 14%
Increased Health Care Costs • Data • 2003 Medical Expenditure Panel Survey • 2003 National Assessment of Adult Literacy Low Health Literacy: Implications for National Health Policy. Vernon, J, Trujillo, A, Rosenbaum, S, DeBuono, B. Oct. 2007
Increased Health Care Costs • Annual cost today: • Future costs based on today’s actions (or lack of action): Low Health Literacy: Implications for National Health Policy. Vernon, J, Trujillo, A, Rosenbaum, S, DeBuono, B. Oct. 2007 $106-238 Billion $1.6-3.6 Trillion
Low Literacy is Overlooked • Patients do not volunteer their literacy problem • Many are ashamed • Some do not recognize their inadequate literacy • Lack of trust
The Big Secret • % of low literate adults that have not told their:
More likely to have Low Literacy • Older • Less education • Non-white
More likely to have Low Literacy • Immigrants • Immigrate after age 12 >50% • NALS Level 1
More likely to have Low Literacy • Low-income • Medical Assistance • Incarceration
You Can’t Tell by Looking • Many Level 1 people don’t fit the stereotypes • 75 % born in USA • 50% are white • 40% hold full or part time jobs
Other Issues Effecting Literacy • Visual Impairments • 60 and older 17% • 80 and older 36%
Other Issues Effecting Literacy • Cognitive impairment • Learning disability • 65 and older • 6% severe dementia • 10-15 % mild-moderate • Increases with advancing age
Screening for Low Literacy • Upside-down test • Rapid Estimate of Adult Literacy in Medicine • REALM • Test of Functional Health Literacy in Adults • TOFHLA • Newest Vital Sign • NVS
Common Clues of Low Literacy • Patients say things like: • “I lost my glasses” • “I don’t need to read this through now, I’ll read it when I get home” • “I’d like to discuss this with my family” • “I have a headache now and can’t focus
Common Clues of Low Literacy • Medication review • Looking vs reading • Unable to name med • Do not know why taking med • Do not know medication timing
Common Clues of Low Literacy • Non-compliance • Medications • Testing • Consultations
How do we fix this problem? • Universal Design • If it works for people with low literacy or low English skills, it will work for everyone.
Barriers to Effective Communication • Environmental factors • Noise • Lack of privacy • Distractions • Time constraints
Barriers to Effective Communication • Health care provider factors • Jargon • Lack of rapport • Ambiguous wording • Incomplete message • Too much information
Barriers to Effective Communication • Patient factors • Language • Cultural issues • Lack of trust • Hearing impairment • Visual impairment
Summary Low literacy is a common problem Low literacy affects health
Summary Low literacy is hard to identify Most of our documents are written at a reading level that is too high.
Policy Issues to Consider • Healthcare Social Marketing • ABE ELL, family, workforce and corrections programs.
What can YOU do? • Raise awareness • American Medical Association Foundation • Low Health Literacy: You Can't Tell By Looking • Health Literacy: Help Your Patients Understand • Institute of Medicine • Prescription to End Confusion
What can YOU do? • Be a patient. • Review processes • Review documents
What can YOU do? • Universal Design • Health Literacy Definition • The degree to which individuals have the capacity to obtain, process, and understand basic information and services needed tomake appropriate decisions regarding their health.
Understandable Consent Forms • A consent process that checks understanding • Documents written at 5th grade reading level • Procedures • Research • Billing/insurance
Informed Consent • Who are We Really Protecting? • Institutions • Researchers • Sponsors • Patients?
Other Consenting Methods • Script with verbal consent • Computer consent • Video/DVD
What can YOU do? Partner with your local Literacy Council Connie Solsrud Executive Director Marathon County Literacy Council 300 N. 1st Street, Wausau 715-261-7292
What can YOU do? Partner with your local Literacy Council Jennifer Lund Director The Neighbors’ Place 745 Scott Street, Wausau 715-845-1966
Wisconsin Literacy • Coordinating organization for community-based adult literacy organizations. • 52 Organizations scattered around the state. • Four Regional Literacy Consultants.
Wisconsin Literacy • www.wisconsinliteracy.org • Michele Erikson, director • 608-257-1655 • michele@wisconsinliteracy.org
Health Literacy Regional Meetings • Steering Committee volunteers needed • Sponsors needed