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Improving Health Equity Through Health Literacy Education

Health literacy is the ability to understand and use health information. More than one-third of adults living in the United States have limited health literacy, which is associated with adverse health outcomes. Physicians need education about how to communicate effectively across the range of health...

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Autores principales: Nepps, Peggy, Lake, Adam, Fox, Jenna, Martinez, Cindy, Matsen, Phebe, Zimmerman, Kristina
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: SLACK Incorporated 2023
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10256271/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/37306322
http://dx.doi.org/10.3928/24748307-20230522-01
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author Nepps, Peggy
Lake, Adam
Fox, Jenna
Martinez, Cindy
Matsen, Phebe
Zimmerman, Kristina
author_facet Nepps, Peggy
Lake, Adam
Fox, Jenna
Martinez, Cindy
Matsen, Phebe
Zimmerman, Kristina
author_sort Nepps, Peggy
collection PubMed
description Health literacy is the ability to understand and use health information. More than one-third of adults living in the United States have limited health literacy, which is associated with adverse health outcomes. Physicians need education about how to communicate effectively across the range of health literacy levels, but residency programs often fail to provide it. We aimed to develop and evaluate a curriculum to establish evidence-based recommendations for training family medicine resident physicians to communicate effectively across the range of health literacy levels. We developed and implemented a 6-month curriculum about health literacy and best practices for communication and collected three pre-/post-measures: patient surveys, videos of residents' patient encounters, and resident self-surveys of knowledge, attitudes, and use of communication techniques. Training of 39 residents included conferences, videotape reviews, written feedback, targeted supervision, and environmental cues. All knowledge/attitude questions on the resident survey improved significantly, as did the use of 4 of 6 communication techniques. Video observation also showed significant improvement in the residents' use of three techniques and a decrease in jargon use and an increase in “plain language” explanations of terms. Multimodal interventions improved residents' knowledge and attitudes about health literacy and use of health literacy precautions. [HLRP: Health Literacy Research and Practice. 2023;7(2):e99–e104.]
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spelling pubmed-102562712023-06-10 Improving Health Equity Through Health Literacy Education Nepps, Peggy Lake, Adam Fox, Jenna Martinez, Cindy Matsen, Phebe Zimmerman, Kristina Health Lit Res Pract Brief Report Health literacy is the ability to understand and use health information. More than one-third of adults living in the United States have limited health literacy, which is associated with adverse health outcomes. Physicians need education about how to communicate effectively across the range of health literacy levels, but residency programs often fail to provide it. We aimed to develop and evaluate a curriculum to establish evidence-based recommendations for training family medicine resident physicians to communicate effectively across the range of health literacy levels. We developed and implemented a 6-month curriculum about health literacy and best practices for communication and collected three pre-/post-measures: patient surveys, videos of residents' patient encounters, and resident self-surveys of knowledge, attitudes, and use of communication techniques. Training of 39 residents included conferences, videotape reviews, written feedback, targeted supervision, and environmental cues. All knowledge/attitude questions on the resident survey improved significantly, as did the use of 4 of 6 communication techniques. Video observation also showed significant improvement in the residents' use of three techniques and a decrease in jargon use and an increase in “plain language” explanations of terms. Multimodal interventions improved residents' knowledge and attitudes about health literacy and use of health literacy precautions. [HLRP: Health Literacy Research and Practice. 2023;7(2):e99–e104.] SLACK Incorporated 2023-06 2023-06-01 /pmc/articles/PMC10256271/ /pubmed/37306322 http://dx.doi.org/10.3928/24748307-20230522-01 Text en © 2023 Nepps, Lake, Fox et al.; licensee SLACK Incorporated https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0/This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial 4.0 International (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0 (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0/) ). This license allows users to copy and distribute, to remix, transform, and build upon the article non-commercially, provided the author is attributed and the new work is non-commercial.
spellingShingle Brief Report
Nepps, Peggy
Lake, Adam
Fox, Jenna
Martinez, Cindy
Matsen, Phebe
Zimmerman, Kristina
Improving Health Equity Through Health Literacy Education
title Improving Health Equity Through Health Literacy Education
title_full Improving Health Equity Through Health Literacy Education
title_fullStr Improving Health Equity Through Health Literacy Education
title_full_unstemmed Improving Health Equity Through Health Literacy Education
title_short Improving Health Equity Through Health Literacy Education
title_sort improving health equity through health literacy education
topic Brief Report
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10256271/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/37306322
http://dx.doi.org/10.3928/24748307-20230522-01
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