Health Literacy or Death
By Josh Seidman | Popularity: 34%Lots of interesting Ix-related stories have been in the media recently, but none more dramatic than the study from the Archives of Internal Medicine that demonstrated a significant relationship between inadequate health literacy and all-cause mortality in seniors. In fact, Baker et al (7/23/07; abstract at http://archinte.ama-assn.org/cgi/content/short/167/14/1503) found that literacy is a more powerful predictor of death than education.
The authors also highlight past research that links inadequate health literacy to less knowledge and worse self-management skills for people with chronic disease.
This research should reinforce the call to action to deliver information to people that is tailored to their individual needs. Although using plain language is one useful strategy, effective tailoring requires multiple tactics–such as understanding individual needs and preferences better, addressing different learning styles, and delivering information through different media (print, electronic, video, audio, phone, etc.).
With the support of the California HealthCare Foundation, the United Hospital Fund, Kaiser Permanente, and the Group Health Community Foundation, IxCenter will launch a Patient-Centered Health Information Technology Initiative later this year. We will be assisting a diverse range of organizations in implementing HIT applications that focus on engaging consumers in care delivery. Although it will surely come up with all sites, particularly in our work with safety-net populations, we anticipate learning a lot about how to overcome health literacy barriers with innovative solutions.
In the interim, I’d love to hear your ideas for delivering tailored information in such situations.
–Josh

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