Health Literacy Update Universal Precautions



Similar documents
Evidence Based Practice Health Literacy Teaching Strategies: Uniting Old School with New School Methods in an Associate Degree Nursing Curriculum

Cliff Coleman, MD, MPH Assistant Professor of Family Medicine Oregon Health & Science University

Health Literacy Screening Tools

Physician Cultural Competency Independent Training Module for Simply Healthcare, Better Health and, Clear Health Alliance Providers

About the CAHPS Item Set for Addressing Health Literacy

Health Literacy & Medication Safety

The Friends of HRSA is a non-partisan coalition of more than 170 national organizations

Promoting and Enhancing the Oral Health of the Public HHS ORAL HEALTH INITIATIVE 2010

Introduction to Health Literacy Angela Greenall West Gippsland Healthcare Group

Australian Federation of AIDS Organisations (AFAO) Primary Health Care Reform

10 Attributes of a Health Literate Organization

Meena Abraham, DrPH, MPH Director of Epidemiology Services Baltimore City Health Department

National Action Plan. to Improve Health Literacy

Health Literacy in Nurse Practitioner Education: The NONPF Perspective

Perspective Implications of the Affordable Care Act for People With HIV Infection and the Ryan White HIV/AIDS Program: What Does the Future Hold?

Public Health Services

Consumers, the health system and health literacy: Taking action to improve safety and quality. Consultation Paper

While health care reform has its foundation and framework at

PROGRAM TITLE: Youth Health and Wellness Clinic. Michigan. Name of Health Department: Grand Traverse County Health Department,

Key Features of the Affordable Care Act, By Year

University of Rhode Island Department of Psychology. Multicultural Psychology Definition

Tobacco Cessation and the Affordable Care Act. Jennifer Singleterry Director, National Health Policy American Lung Association

Timeline: Key Feature Implementations of the Affordable Care Act

Sexual and Reproductive Justice: New York City s Approach

September 17, Dear Secretary Sebelius:

District of Columbia Department of Health: Chronic Disease State Action Plan 0

Behavioral/Mental health

Inventory of good practices

kaiser medicaid commission on and the uninsured May 2009 Community Care of North Carolina: Putting Health Reform Ideas into Practice in Medicaid

Alabama Department of Public Health Strategic Plan

Title I. QUALITY, AFFORDABLE HEALTH COVERAGE FOR ALL AMERICANS

Update on MA SIM e Referral Program

Racial and Ethnic Disparities in Women s Health Coverage and Access To Care Findings from the 2001 Kaiser Women s Health Survey

Fact Sheet: The Affordable Care Act s New Rules on Preventive Care July 14, 2010

Department of Veterans Affairs National HIV/AIDS Strategy Operational Plan 2011

SUBTITLE D--PROVISIONS RELATING TO TITLE IV SEC GRANTS FOR SMALL BUSINESSES TO PROVIDE COMPREHENSIVE WORKPLACE WELLNESS PROGRAMS

Communication: Health Professionals and Consumers

Knowledge, Skills, and Abilities Essential to Cultural Competence

Women have a different relationship to the health care system than

Health Profile for St. Louis City

HORIZONS. The 2013 Dallas County Community Health Needs Assessment

Healthy People 2020 Spotlight on Health presents Promoting and Measuring Health-Related Quality of Life and Well-Being

Zanie Leroy M.D., M.P.H. School Health Branch Division of Population Health

Core Competencies for Non-Clinically Licensed Patient Navigators. from. The George Washington University (GW) Cancer Institute

Access to Care / Care Utilization for Nebraska s Women

Health Literacy: An Education Module for Physician Assistants

PIPC: Hepatitis Roundtable Summary and Recommendations on Dissemination and Implementation of Clinical Evidence

Transition. Cultural and Linguistic Competence Checklist for Medical Home Teams

Paul Glassman DDS, MA, MBA Professor and Director of Community Oral Health University of the Pacific School of Dentistry San Francisco, CA

Access to Health Services

SCHOOL NURSE COMPETENCIES SELF-EVALUATION TOOL

Principles on Health Care Reform

Division for Heart Disease and Stroke Prevention. Division Budget and Program Briefing for the Institute of Medicine April 9, 2009

Department of Epidemiology and Biostatistics

Mental Health In Multicultural Australia (MHiMA) Strategic Directions Building Capacity & Supporting Inclusion

HEALTHCARE DESIGN PROJECT

Section VIII. Community Priorities & Action Plans

Health Care Quality Assessment

KATRYNA MCCOY, PhD, FNP-C

Patty Iron Cloud National Native American Youth Initiative Meeting June 20, 2011

System Transformation In Philadelphia: A Recovery Revolution

Healthy People 2020: Who s Leading the Leading Health Indicators?

Patient Navigators and Community Health Workers: The Evolving Role of Certification

1. To create a comprehensive Benchmark plan that will assure maximum tobacco cessation coverage to all populations in Rhode Island:

Integrated Health Care Models and Practices

Evidence-Based Practice for Public Health Identified Knowledge Domains of Public Health

LEARNING WHAT WORKS AND INCREASING KNOWLEDGE

The Attorney General s Community Benefits Guidelines for Non Profit Hospitals

THE ROLE OF HEALTH INFORMATION TECHNOLOGY IN PATIENT-CENTERED CARE COLLABORATION Louisiana HIPAA & EHR Conference Presenter: Chris Williams

Health literacy Implications

Assessing Health Education in Middle Schools

State of Mississippi. Oral Health Plan

How To Prevent An Std

Transcription:

Health Literacy Update Universal Precautions Clinical Advisory Committee June 2013 Chris Reisig, M.A. Project Coordinator, Office of the Medical Director, AIDS Institute

Overview - Health Literacy s Continued Relevance - Health Literacy and the QAC - The Shift to Universal Precautions - Next Steps

National Assessment of Adult Literacy (2003) Distribution of Health Literacy Levels among English-Speaking Adults in the U.S. Basic 22% Below Basic 14% Proficient 12% Intermediate 52% Nearly nine out of ten Americans adults have some trouble with everyday health information 77 million Americans have significant trouble

The Scope of the Problem Low health literacy affects more adults than diabetes, obesity, HIV, AIDS and breast cancer combined It disproportionately affects: Adults over 65 Racial and ethnic groups other than White People with less than a high school degree or GED People living at or below the poverty line Non-native English speakers Leads to an estimated $106-$236 billion in unnecessary healthcare costs annually U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, National Action Plan to Improve Health Literacy (2010)

Health Literacy and Health Outcomes A 2011 Annals of Internal Medicine literature review found that low health literacy is consistently associated with: More hospitalizations Greater use of emergency room care Poorer ability to demonstrate appropriate medication usage Poorer ability to interpret labels and health messages Poorer overall health status and higher mortality rates among elderly persons Berkman et al., 2011

Health Literacy and HIV/AIDS The same Annals review judged HIV-specific health literacy research to suffer from low strength of evidence However, repeated studies by Kalichman et al. suggest that low health literacy is generally associated with poorer adherence The Health literacy/poor adherence pathway is a continuing area of research

Health Literacy, the QAC and AIDS Institute

A Brief Timeline Health literacy topics are presented at QAC from June 2009 to December 2010: Health literacy as a patient- and systems-level issue (Namboodiri) The relationship between health literacy and health outcomes (Rudd) Environmental assessment toolkits (Antler) Health literacy as a quality of care measure (Fisher) Health literacy indicator subcommittee formed 2009 Indicators piloted in 2011 Internal AIDS Institute workgroup formed 2010

ehivqual Health Literacy Indicators

The AIDS Institute s Adopted Definitions The degree to which individuals have the capacity to obtain, process, and understand basic health information and services needed to make appropriate health decisions. U.S. Department of Health and Human Services (2000) Institute of Medicine (2004) Health literacy is the ability to read, understand and act upon health related information. Health literacy also refers to the capacity of professionals and institutions to communicate effectively so that community members can make informed decisions and take appropriate actions to protect and promote health. Office of the Mayor, New York City

Health Literacy s Individual and Systemic Components Communication skills of consumer and provider Cultural and social norms Environment Health knowledge Demands of the situation Reading ability Health Literacy Demands of the healthcare system Adapted from U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, Quick Guide to Health Literacy (2006)

Universal Precaution

A Shift in Emphasis Universal precaution is not a new approach to health literacy Growing consensus that such a paradigm best addresses patients needs and has the potential for sustained quality of care improvement

The Prior Emphasis

Standardized Screening Rapid Estimate of Adult Health Literacy in Medicine (REALM) REALM-R Short Assessment of Health Literacy for Spanishspeaking Adults (SAHLSA) Test of Functional Health Literacy in Adults (TOFHLA) Newest Vital Sign (NVS) BEHKA-HIV (Not a comprehensive list)

The Logic of Health Literacy Screening Health literacy research employs screening and enables quantification of the problem Enables the detection of low health literacy Allows for easy documentation

HL Screening Concerns (Practical) Screening takes time in a time-sensitive setting Contact with health environments happens well before screening can occur Screening results does not necessarily translate into changed clinical practice

HL Screening Concerns (Conceptual) Patient shame and stigma Uncertainty regarding what screening was exactly measuring Increasing awareness of health literacy s contextual dependency

Health Literacy Domains Prose Literacy Document Literacy Numeracy

Screening Examples - NVS

Screening Examples BEHKA HI

HL Screening Concerns (Conceptual) Patient shame and stigma Uncertainty regarding what screening was exactly measuring Increasing awareness of health literacy s contextual dependency

Low HL is More Common Than Not Distribution of Health Literacy Levels among English-Speaking Adults in the U.S. Basic 22% Below Basic 14% Proficient 12% If nine out of ten Americans have some trouble with everyday health information, what outcome are we really screening for? Intermediate 52%

The Universal Precaution Approach Assumes everyone could use help with health information Considers it the responsibility of the healthcare system to make sure patients understand Focuses on: Making health literacy integral to healthcare organizations mission, structure, and operations Simplifying the literacy requirements of healthcare Training healthcare agents to always communicate effectively

Adapted from Ten Attributes of Health Literate Health Care Organizations (IOM 2012) Universal Precaution in Action Leadership Level Staff Level Environmental Level Clinical Level Assign responsibility and authority for health literacy oversight at an executive level Make clear communication an explicit commitment in organizational mission statements Provide health literacy training to clinical and non-clinical staff Continuous evaluate staff on their patient interactions and design remedial training for those in need Create environments with low literacy demands Supply navigation aids (e.g. volunteers, information kiosks, color coding, etc.) Routinely employ teachback and other communication heuristics Redundantly present information (orally, visually and literally) Other key health literacy domains include information systems, consumer advisory mechanisms and transactional transparency.

Precipitating Change This shift in emphasis towards universal precautions has resulted from a growing body of literature and federal standards: A Prescription to End Confusion, (IOM 2004) Healthy People 2020 (HHS, 2010) National Action Plan to Improve Health Literacy (HHS, 2010) Standards for Patient-Centered Communication, (JCAHO, 2011) Improving Health Literacy Within a State (IOM, 2011) How Can Health Care Organizations Become More Health Literate? (IOM, 2012) Updated National Culturally and Linguistically Appropriate Services (CLAS) Standards (Office of Minority Health, 2013)

A Health Literate Care Model Koh et al. s recent article in Health Affairs (Feb. 2013) exemplifies the shift towards universal precautions A Health Literate Care Model integrates universal precaution strategies into elements of the Chronic Care Model using existing tools and resources

Next Steps

Health Literacy at the AIDS Institute The AI Health Literacy workgroup has been reformed. Current areas of focus include: Standardizing health literacy-related language in Requests for Applications and Proposals Training contract managers on universal precautions Other potential areas for consideration: Revisiting the ehivqual indicators Development of a health literacy organizational assessment tool distinct from existing environmental assessment tools

Points of Intersection Increasingly, health literacy is being considered in the larger contexts of cultural competency, patient activation and patient engagement

Going Forward Consequently, there is a need to emphasize health literacy as a necessary precondition for these more complex concepts. There is also a need for the health literacy field to stay grounded in literacy/numeracy Patient Engagement Patient Activation Cultural Competency Health Literacy

Going Forward The identification of effective, evidence-based universal precaution interventions remains paramount Documenting universal precautions will also require additional thought and experimentation

Discussion For more information about health literacy, please contact: Chris Reisig cjr04@health.state.ny.us Work: (212) 417-5494

Works consulted (1) Antler L. Findings from the Health Literacy Environment Screening Pilot Project. Presentation. 23 June 2010. Antler L. The Health Literacy Environment of Hospitals and Health Care Centers: A Summary of findings by Rima Rudd and Jennie Anderson. Presentation. May 2010. City of New York (2011). NYC Office of Education: Health Literacy. January 5, 2011, from http://www.ci.nyc.ny.us/html/adulted/html/health/health.shtml. Davis, Terry C., et al. "Development and validation of the Rapid Estimate of Adolescent Literacy in Medicine (REALM-Teen): A tool to screen adolescents for below-grade reading in health care settings." Pediatrics 118.6 (2006): e1707-e1714. DeWalt DA, Callahan LF, Hawk V, Broucksou KA, Hink A, Rudd, RE, Brach C. 2010. Health Literacy Universal Precautions Toolkit. North Carolina Network Consortium and the Cecil G. Sheps Center for Health Services Research. Chapel Hill, NC: University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. Fortenberry, J. D., et al. "Relation of health literacy to gonorrhea related care." Sexually Transmitted Infections 77.3 (2001): 206-211. Hawkins AO, Kantayya VS, Sharkery-Asner C. 2010. Health Literacy: A Potential Barrier in Caring for Underserved Populations. Dis Mon, 56:734-740. Institute of Medicine (IOM). Health Literacy: A Prescription to End Confusion. Eds: Nielsen- Bohlman L, Panzer AM, Hamlin B, Kindig DA. Washington, DC: National Academies Press, 2004. Jordan JE, Osborne RH, Buchbinder R. 2010. Critical appraisal of health literacy indices revealed variable underlying constructs, narrow content and psychometric weaknesses. J Clin Epidem, Jul 16.

Works consulted (2) Koh, H., Brach, C., Harris, L., and Parchman, M. (2013). A Proposed Health Literate Care Model Would Constitute a Systems Approach to Improving Patients Engagement in Care. Health Affairs, 32 (2):357-367. Kutner, M., Greenberg, E., Jin, Y., and Paulsen, C. (2006). The Health Literacy of America s Adults: Results From the 2003 National Assessment of Adult Literacy (NCES 2006 483). U.S. Department of Education. Washington, DC: National Center for Education Statistics. Manganello, Jennifer A. "Health literacy and adolescents: a framework and agenda for future research." Health education research 23.5 (2008): 840-847. Murphy, Debra A., et al. "Health literacy and antiretroviral adherence among HIV-infected adolescents." Patient education and counseling 79.1 (2010): 25-29. Navarra, Ann-Margaret, et al. "Health Literacy and Adherence to Antiretroviral Therapy Among HIV-Infected Youth." Journal of the Association of Nurses in AIDS Care (2013). Namboodiri S. Health Literacy: Health Literacy Screening Tool Overview. Presentation. 11 Jan 2009. Ohl M, Harris A, Nurudtinova D, Xueya C, Drohobyczer D, Overton ET. 2010. Do Brief Screening Questions or Provider Perception Accurately Identify Persons with Low Health Literacy in the HIV Primary Care Setting? AIDS Patient Care and STDs. 24(10): 623-9. Osborn CY, Davis TC, Bailey SC, Wolf MS. 2010. Health Literacy in the Context of HIV Treatment: Introducing the Brief Estimate of Health Knowledge and Action (BEHKA) HIV Version. AIDS Behav. 24:181-8.

Works consulted (3) Rudd RE, Anderson JE. 2007. The Health Literacy Environment of Hospitals and Health Centers. Partners for Action: Making Your Healthcare Facility Literacy-Friendly. Cambridge MA: National Center for the Study of Adult Learning and Literacy. Online at http://www.hsph.harvard.edu/healthliteracy/practice/environmental-barriers/index.html U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, Office of Disease Prevention and Health Promotion. (2010). National Action Plan to Improve Health Literacy. Washington, DC: Author. U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, Office of Disease Prevention and Health Promotion.(2006). Quick Guide to Health Literacy. Washington, DC.