building health literacy: essential steps and practical solutions

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Building Health Literacy: Essential Steps and Practical Solutions Essential Hospitals Engagement Network October 10, 2013

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Building Health Literacy: Essential Steps and Practical Solutions. Essential Hospitals Engagement Network. October 10, 2013. Our new Name. We’ve rebranded! The National Association of Public Hospitals and Health Systems is now America’s Essential Hospitals . - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Building Health Literacy: Essential Steps and Practical Solutions

Building Health Literacy: Essential Steps and Practical SolutionsEssential Hospitals Engagement Network

October 10, 2013

Page 2: Building Health Literacy: Essential Steps and Practical Solutions

2

OUR NEW NAME

We’ve rebranded! The National Association of Public Hospitals and Health Systems is now America’s Essential Hospitals. Although we’ve changed our name, our mission is the same: to champion hospitals and health systems that provide the highest quality of service to all by achieving the best health outcomes for every patient, especially those in greatest need. The new name underscores our members’ continuing public commitment and the essential nature of our work to care for the most vulnerable and provide vital community services, such as trauma care and disaster response.

This is an exciting time for us and our members, as we lean forward into new care models, opportunities and challenges of reform, and quality and safety innovations that often take root in our member systems. Our new website address: www.EssentialHospitals.org

Page 3: Building Health Literacy: Essential Steps and Practical Solutions

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CHAT FEATURE

The chat tool is available to ask questions or comments at any time during this event.

Page 4: Building Health Literacy: Essential Steps and Practical Solutions

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RAISE YOUR HAND

To raise your hand, you must be in the “Participants” pane.

Your line will be un-muted to ask your question. Once your question has been answered, please un-raise your hand.

Page 5: Building Health Literacy: Essential Steps and Practical Solutions

5

SPEAKER INFORMATION

David Engler, PhDSenior Vice

President for Leadership and

InnovationAmerica’s Essential

Hospitals

Dean Schillinger, MDProfessor of Medicine in

Residence at the University of California San Francisco Chief of the UCSF Division

of General Internal Medicine at San Francisco

General Hospital

Michele Edwards, NP

Heart Failure Program Manager

Grady Heart Failure Clinic 

Page 6: Building Health Literacy: Essential Steps and Practical Solutions

6

AGENDA

• EHEN health equity overview

• Health Literacy, Health Outcomes and Health Literate Organizations  - Dean Schillinger, MD

• Addressing Health Literacy - Michele Edwards, NP       • Q & A

• Wrap-up and announcements

Page 7: Building Health Literacy: Essential Steps and Practical Solutions

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PARTNERSHIP FOR PATIENTS

Partnership for Patients

(PfP)

• CMS-funded• Reduce 9 hospital-acquired conditions by

40%• Reduce readmissions by 20%

Hospital Engagement

Networks(HENs)

• 26 contracted organizations

• 3,700 U.S. hospitals

Essential Hospitals

Engagement Network (EHEN)

• 22 hospitals nationwide

• Only safety-net focused HEN

• Special focus on health equity

Page 8: Building Health Literacy: Essential Steps and Practical Solutions

8

WHY SHOULD WE FOCUS ON HEALTH LITERACY?

• 75 million English-speaking adults have limited health literacy

• Annual cost to U.S. economy of up to $238 billion• Health literacy levels affect health outcomes

» Increased use of emergency room and acute care services » Less likely to get flu shots» Lower use of mammography» Greater likelihood of taking medicines incorrectly » Higher rates of readmission

• Elderly, non-whites, immigrants and low income adults most affected

Health Literacy Interventions and Outcomes: An Updated Systematic Review. March2011. Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality, Rockville, MD.

Page 9: Building Health Literacy: Essential Steps and Practical Solutions

9

EHEN: MOVING TOWARDS ACTION

• Health equity educational series» Next equity webinar: January 2014

• November 2013: EHEN data feedback report on selected outcome measures stratified by race and ethnicity

• Offer training to hospital staff on standardizing self-reported REAL data

• Disseminate “bright spots” in achieving equity

Page 10: Building Health Literacy: Essential Steps and Practical Solutions

10

Dean Schillinger, MDProfessor of Medicine in Residence at the University of California San

Francisco Chief of the UCSF Division of

General Internal Medicine at San Francisco General Hospital

Page 11: Building Health Literacy: Essential Steps and Practical Solutions

Health Literacy, Health Outcomes and Health Literate Organizations

Dean Schillinger, MD UCSF Professor of Medicine in Residence

Chief, Division of General Internal Medicine, SF General Hospital

Director, Health Communications Program,

UCSF Center for Vulnerable Populations

Page 12: Building Health Literacy: Essential Steps and Practical Solutions

Objectives

Describe prevalence of limited health literacy/numeracy give examples of how it can affect health outcomes, using diabetes as an exemplar condition

Because health literacy represents a balance between individuals' health literacy skills and the health literacy demands and attributes of the healthcare system, we describe» 10 Attributes of health literate healthcare organizations

Page 13: Building Health Literacy: Essential Steps and Practical Solutions
Page 14: Building Health Literacy: Essential Steps and Practical Solutions

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 [informed] health decisions.”

-Institute of Medicine, 2004

3 domains: oral (speaking, listening); written (reading, writing); numerical (quantitative)

?Web? Capacity/Preparedness Demand Mismatch

Schillinger Am J Bioethics 2007

Page 15: Building Health Literacy: Essential Steps and Practical Solutions

1st National Assessment of Health Literacy n=19,714

Below Basic: Circle date on doctor’s appointment slip

Basic: Give 2 reasons a person with no symptoms should get tested for cancer based on a clearly written pamphlet

Intermediate: Determine what time to take Rx medicine based on label

Proficient: Calculate employee share of health insurance costs using table

National Center for Educational Statistics, U.S. Department of Education, 2003

Page 16: Building Health Literacy: Essential Steps and Practical Solutions

1st Health Literacy Assessment

Basic

Below Basic

Proficient

14%

12%

53%

22%

National Assessment of Adult Literacy (NAAL): National Center for Educational Statistics, U.S. Department of Education, 2003.

Intermediate

AverageMedicare

Hispanic

n=19,000 U.S. Adults

Page 17: Building Health Literacy: Essential Steps and Practical Solutions

Prevalence of Limited Literacy

in Diabetes

In public hospital settings, between 2/3 -3/4 of diabetes patients over 65 have limited literacy

In private managed care settings, between 1/3-1/2 of diabetes patients over 65 have limited health literacy

Page 18: Building Health Literacy: Essential Steps and Practical Solutions

Patients with Diabetes and Low Literacy Less Likely to Know Correct

Management

0 20 40 60 80 100

Percent

Need to Know: symptoms of low blood sugar (hypoglycemia)

Need to Do:

correct action for hypoglycemic symptoms

*Williams et al., Archive of Internal Medicine, 1998

Low

ModerateHigh

LowModerate

High

Williams 1998

Page 19: Building Health Literacy: Essential Steps and Practical Solutions

0

10

20

30

40

50

1st Quartile 4th Quartile

% o

f p

ati

en

ts

Inadequate

Marginal

Adequate

Literacy is Associated with Glycemic Control, N=408

(Tight Control: HbA1c7.2%) (Poor Control: HbA1c>9.5%)

Adjusted OR=0.57, p=0.05

Adjusted OR=2.03, p=0.02

Schillinger JAMA 2002

Page 20: Building Health Literacy: Essential Steps and Practical Solutions

Complication n** AOR 95% CI

Retinopathy 111 2.33 (1.19-4.57)

Nephropathy 62 1.71 (0.75-3.90)

Lower Extremity Amputation 27 2.48 (0.74-8.34)

Cerebrovascular Disease 46 2.71 (1.06-6.97)

Ischemic Heart Disease 93 1.73 (0.83-3.60)

Lower literacy is associated with self-reported diabetes complications (N=408)

Schillinger JAMA 2002

Page 21: Building Health Literacy: Essential Steps and Practical Solutions

Limited Health Literacy Patients Experience More Hypoglycemia

N=14,000

0%

2%

4%

6%

8%

10%

12%

14%

16%

Problemslearning

Help reading Notconfident

with forms

Adequate

Limited

P for all<0.001

Sarkar, Adler, Schillinger, JGIM 2010

Page 22: Building Health Literacy: Essential Steps and Practical Solutions

Limited literacy associated with higher adjusted mortality (OR 2.03, AOR 1.75)

Page 23: Building Health Literacy: Essential Steps and Practical Solutions
Page 24: Building Health Literacy: Essential Steps and Practical Solutions

How Does Limited Literacy Affect (Verbal) Clinical

Interactions?

Impedes understanding of technical information and explanations of self-care

Impairs shared decision-making Speed of dialogue, extent of jargon, lack of

interactivity determinants of effectiveness of communication

Impairs medication communication, jeopardizing patient safety (medication “discordance”)

Fang et al. 2006 JGIMSchillinger et al. 2004 Pt Ed and CounselingCastro et al, Am J Health Beh 2007Schillinger et al. 2003 Arch Int MedSchillinger et al 2004. AHRQ Advances in Patient Safety

Page 25: Building Health Literacy: Essential Steps and Practical Solutions

Diabetes Patients with Limited Literacy Experience Poorer Quality

Communication, N=408

0

10

20

30

40

50

%

Doctor Use Words NotUnderstood

Give You Test Resultsw/o Explanation

Confused AboutMedical Care

Doctor UnderstandProblems Doing Rx

Inadequate FHL

Adequate FHL

(Often/Always) (Often/Always) (Often/Always) (Never/Rarely/ Sometimes)

OR=3.2;p<0.01OR=3.3;p=0.02

OR=2.4;p=0.02

OR=1.9;p=0.04

32%

13% 13% 13%

26%21%

33%

20%

Page 26: Building Health Literacy: Essential Steps and Practical Solutions

Literacy and the Digital Divide in Diabetes*Kaiser Patient Portal Study N= 14,102

Sarkar, Karter, Schillinger J Health Comm 2010

*For difference between those with and without limited health literacy, p for all<0.01

Page 27: Building Health Literacy: Essential Steps and Practical Solutions

The Other Side of the Coin:10 Attributes of “Health Literate”

Healthcare OrganizationsDean Schillinger, MD

Division of General Internal Medicine and Health Communications Program, Center for Vulnerable Populations at San Francisco General

Hospital, University of California San Francisco

Commissioned by IOM Health Literacy Policy Roundtablehttp://iom.edu/~/media/Files/Perspectives-Files/2012/Discussion-Papers/BPH_Ten_HLit_Attributes.pdf

 

Page 28: Building Health Literacy: Essential Steps and Practical Solutions

Rationale for Focusing on Health Literacy on the Organizational Level

• Most HL research has focused on characterizing patients’ deficits, how best to measure a patient’s health literacy, and on clarifying relationships between a limited health literacy and outcomes

• Growing appreciation that health literacy represents a balance between individuals' health literacy skill and the health literacy demands and attributes of the healthcare system

Page 29: Building Health Literacy: Essential Steps and Practical Solutions

Rationale for Focusing on Health Literacy on the Organizational Level (continued)

• Interest and commitment from multiple stakeholders to address system-level factors contributing to the high literacy demands of the healthcare system.

• Enactment of the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act (ACA) provides both opportunities and challenges for individuals with limited health literacy.• Insurance reform and Medicaid expansion• Patient Centered Medical Homes• HITECH Act

Page 30: Building Health Literacy: Essential Steps and Practical Solutions

Health Literate Organizations Defined

A health literate organization makes it easier for people to navigate, understand, and use information and services to take care of their health.

Brach, Schillinger et al. 2012

Page 31: Building Health Literacy: Essential Steps and Practical Solutions

10 attributes of a health literate health care organization

Page 32: Building Health Literacy: Essential Steps and Practical Solutions
Page 33: Building Health Literacy: Essential Steps and Practical Solutions
Page 34: Building Health Literacy: Essential Steps and Practical Solutions

Attribute 1: A Health Literate Organization

1. Has leadership that makes health literacy integral to its mission, structure, and operations. Leadership: » Makes clear and effective communication a priority » Assigns responsibility for health literacy oversight » Sets goals for health literacy improvement» Allocates fiscal and human resources

Page 35: Building Health Literacy: Essential Steps and Practical Solutions

Attribute 2 A Health Literate Organization

2. Integrates health literacy into planning, evaluation measures, patient safety, and quality improvement.» Incorporates health literacy into all planning

activities» Conducts ongoing organizational assessments » Measures the success in achieving the health

literacy attributes and identifies areas for quality improvement

Page 36: Building Health Literacy: Essential Steps and Practical Solutions

Attribute 3 A Health Literate Organization

Prepares the workforce to be health literate and monitors progress» Hires diverse staff with health literacy expertise » Sets and meets goals for training all staff and

members of governing bodies» Provides health literacy training and incorporates

health literacy into orientations and other trainings» Arranges for staff to take advantage of on-line health

literacy training resources

Page 37: Building Health Literacy: Essential Steps and Practical Solutions

Attribute 4 A Health Literate Organization

Includes populations served in the design, implementation, and evaluation of health information and services» Includes members of the population on governing

bodies» Establish advisory groups that involve individuals

with limited health literacy, adult educators, and experts in health literacy

» Collaborate with community members in design and implementation of interventions and development and testing of materials.

Page 38: Building Health Literacy: Essential Steps and Practical Solutions

Attribute 5 A Health Literate Organization

Meets needs of populations with a range of health literacy skills while avoiding stigmatization» Adopts health literacy universal precautions,

such as offering everyone help with literacy tasks

» Allocates resources proportionate to the concentration of individuals with limited health literacy

Page 39: Building Health Literacy: Essential Steps and Practical Solutions

Attribute 6 A Health Literate Organization

Uses health literacy strategies in interpersonal communications and confirms understanding at all points of contact» Refrains from using medical jargon» Confirms understanding (e.g. Teach-Back)» Secures language assistance for speakers of

languages other than English » Limits to two to three messages at a time » Encourages questions

Page 40: Building Health Literacy: Essential Steps and Practical Solutions

Attribute 7 A Health Literate Organization

Provides easy access to health information and services and navigation assistance» Facilitates scheduling appointments with other

services » Uses clear signage» Offers assistance with all literacy related tasks» Makes electronic patient portals user-centered and

provides training on how to use them

Page 41: Building Health Literacy: Essential Steps and Practical Solutions

Attribute 8 A Health Literate Organization

Designs and distributes print, audio/visual materials, and social media content that is easy to understand and act on» Involves diverse audiences, including those with

limited health literacy, in development and rigorous user testing

» Uses a quality translation process to produce materials in languages other than English

Page 42: Building Health Literacy: Essential Steps and Practical Solutions

Attribute 9 A Health Literate Organization

Addresses health literacy in high risk situations, including care transitions and communications about medicines» Prioritizes high-risk situations (e.g., informed

consent for surgery and other invasive procedures) » Emphasizes high-risk topics (e.g., conditions that

require extensive self-management)

Page 43: Building Health Literacy: Essential Steps and Practical Solutions

Attribute 10 A Health Literate Organization

Communicates clearly what health plans cover and what individuals will have to pay for services» Provides easy-to-understand descriptions of

health insurance policies » Communicates the out-of-pocket costs for

health care services before they are delivered

Page 44: Building Health Literacy: Essential Steps and Practical Solutions

Concluding Thoughts

Limited Health Literacy is common in public hospitals and has a range of untoward health consequences, some of them mediated by poor clinician-patient communication

Health literacy represents a balance between individuals' health literacy skills and the literacy demands and attributes of the healthcare system

The IOM paper offers a set of attributes, aspirational goals and foci for institutional investments for organizations striving to become more ‘health literate’

We recognize that it reflects a utopian vision; the list is not exhaustive and should be seen as the continuation of a conversation re: how healthcare organizations can address health literacy on the institutional level

Provides a roadmap to advance an optimistic vision of how organizations should evolve to be more responsive to the needs of populations with limited health literacy in tangible ways

Page 45: Building Health Literacy: Essential Steps and Practical Solutions

45

Q & A

Page 46: Building Health Literacy: Essential Steps and Practical Solutions

46

Michele Edwards, NPHeart Failure Program Manager

Grady Heart Failure Clinic 

Page 47: Building Health Literacy: Essential Steps and Practical Solutions

Addressing Health LiteracyMICHELE EDWARDS, ACNP

HEART FAILURE PROGRAM MANAGER

GRADY MEMORIAL HOSPITAL

Page 48: Building Health Literacy: Essential Steps and Practical Solutions

Grady Memorial Hospital

▪ 953 bed public academic hospital

▪ Located in the heart of downtown Atlanta

▪ Emory and Morehouse School of Medicine

▪ Patient demographics▪ Largely African American population▪ Mostly uninsured and underinsured▪ 12% of patients are limited English proficient (LEP)▪ 5,104 patients seen in ER are homeless▪ 1,202 patients admitted/seen (inpatient, outpatient) are homeless▪ 51 patients seen in heart failure clinic are homeless (using date range 01/01/2013-09/15/2013 data pulled from EPIC)

Page 49: Building Health Literacy: Essential Steps and Practical Solutions

Overview of the Heart Failure Program

▪ Inception March 2011

▪ Focus on improving quality of care for heart failure patients and reducing readmission rates

▪ 2 nurse practitioners (NP) under the direction of medical director

▪ Provide heart failure education

▪ Address barriers to care:▪ Ability to obtain medication▪ Transportation▪ Homelessness▪ Illiteracy/low literacy▪ Mental Illness▪ Lack of insurance▪ Drug/Alcohol abuse

▪ Assist with seamless transition from hospital to home

▪ Follow up phone call within 72 hours of discharge

▪ Follow up appointment within 7 days of discharge

▪ Clinical Decision Unit (CDU) patients▪ NP sees patient in CDU▪ Patient given heart failure clinic

(HFC) follow up within 3 days

▪ Patients see in HFC by NP

▪ Heart failure NP’s have touched >1300 patients since March 2011

Page 50: Building Health Literacy: Essential Steps and Practical Solutions

Health Literacy Problems

Patients who are more apt to have poor literacy/healt

h literacy

• Patients that are homeless• Limited English proficient

Recognizing there is an

issue

• Stumbled upon when asked patients to read front of heart failure survival guide

Mislabeled non-

compliant

• Low literacy/illiteracy• Ex. Taking all meds daily instead of

as prescribed (BID, TID)

Lack of awareness by

house staff

• Using medical jargon when discussing care with patient

• Ex. “What beta blocker are you taking?

Page 51: Building Health Literacy: Essential Steps and Practical Solutions

Interventions and strategies

▪ Heart Failure Survival Guide▪ Written on 5th grade

reading level▪ Illustrations▪ Incorporates aspects of

Project RED

Page 52: Building Health Literacy: Essential Steps and Practical Solutions

Interventions and strategies

REINFORCE EDUCATION WHEN PATIENT SEEN IN CLINIC USING WRITTEN MATERIAL, VIDEOS,

VERBAL

Page 53: Building Health Literacy: Essential Steps and Practical Solutions

Outcomes to Date

▪ Increasing awareness of staff in turn increases quality of care of our patients

▪ GAGE award for quality 2013: Analysis of first 300 patients in Heart Failure Program▪ ED visits decreased from

baseline 254 to 154 visits▪ The cases of 30 day readmission

rates decreased from 81 to 38 during this evaluation period

▪ More patients kept their post discharge appointments; the did not keep appointment (DNKA) rate decreased from 75% to 22%

▪ Readmission rate decreased from 14.2% to 9.7% for all payer source, HF related admissions (data from UHC March 2011-March 2012)

• Tailoring education and interventions through a health literacy lens has positively impacted our heart failure program

• Increasing patients knowledge of own health

• Improving self management• Empowering patient• Improving compliance

Page 54: Building Health Literacy: Essential Steps and Practical Solutions

Key Lessons Learned

StaffAwarene

ss

Screening

Literacy ▪ LITERACY IS AN ISSUE IN

2013

▪ Our informal method of literacy evaluation is opening up dialogue on literacy

▪ Everyone needs to be screened“assuming a patient is literate only harms the patient if in fact they need tailored education”

▪ ALL staff need to be educated on literacy ▪ Awareness is an issue

Page 55: Building Health Literacy: Essential Steps and Practical Solutions

Next Steps / Sustainability

• Develop metrics and collect heart failure program literacy data

• Number of patients that are able to read the front cover vs. total patients seen

• Number of patients able to repeat instructions

• Data on ability for self-management

• Evaluate interventions and make changes as necessary

• Spread to other clinics at Grady as literacy is not just a heart failure patient issue

Page 56: Building Health Literacy: Essential Steps and Practical Solutions

Thank You!!

Michele Edwards, NPHeart Failure Program Manager

Grady Heart Failure [email protected]

Page 57: Building Health Literacy: Essential Steps and Practical Solutions

57

Q & A

Page 58: Building Health Literacy: Essential Steps and Practical Solutions

58

THANK YOU FOR ATTENDING

• Next Webinar: The Patient Advisor’s Voice in Patient and Family Engagement on Nov. 7, 2-3 pm ET

• Evaluation: When you close out of WebEx following the

webinar a blue evaluation will open in your browser. Please take a moment to complete. We greatly appreciate your feedback!

• Essential Hospitals Engagement Network website: http://tc.nphhi.org/Collaborate