[HealthLiteracy 2036] Re: AMA Medical News Article on Health LiteracyMSkewes at ria.buffalo.edu MSkewes at ria.buffalo.eduTue May 27 13:05:51 EDT 2008
Hello All, This is interesting. In my view, health literacy is not static, but is a dynamic construct. We may all have base levels of health literacy, but if you view health literacy as the capacity to obtain, process, and utilize health-related information in order to make appropriate health-related decisions, I believe we all may experience low health literacy at times. For example, when I am stressed or scared or nervous, my health literacy is greatly diminished because my capacity to understand becomes impaired. Therefore, I would strongly recommend that physicians and other health professionals assume everyone has low health literacy and treat all patients the same regarding plain language, the teach-back method, and any other techniques shown to improve understanding among patients. Just waiting unclothed in a little room for the doctor to show up can be nerve-wracking enough to require more in-depth explanation, and plain language should be the norm, in my opinion. Best, Monica Monica C. Skewes, Ph.D. Postdoctoral Associate Research Institute on Addictions University at Buffalo The State University of New York 1021 Main Street Buffalo, New York 14203 716-887-2242 (phone) 716-887-2510 (fax) "David J. Rosen" <djrosen at comcast.net> Sent by: healthliteracy-bounces at nifl.gov 05/24/2008 08:42 AM Please respond to The Health and Literacy Discussion List <healthliteracy at nifl.gov> To The Health and Literacy Discussion List <healthliteracy at nifl.gov> cc Subject [HealthLiteracy 2034] AMA Medical News Article on Health Literacy Health Literacy Colleagues I would like to call your attention an article, dated June 2, 2008 (interesting dateline) in the American Medical news of the AMA . It poses this question: Should physicians adjust the communication level for each patient, or are comprehension difficulties so common that simpler language should be used with everyone? Doctors are being urged by some researchers to administer a short (on average, just under 3 minutes) literacy test to their patients to increase the doctors' health literacy awareness. Others argue that while appropriate for research, this does not make sense for clinical practice. They argue for plain language for all patients. How many patients are proficient in managing their own medical care? One recent study found that only 12% of adults have the skills to proficiently manage their own medical care. The article mentions that the AMA Foundation will release a report in July on assessing the country's health literacy. You'll find the article at: http://www.ama-assn.org/amednews/2008/06/02/hlsd0602.htm David J. Rosen djrosen at comcast.net ---------------------------------------------------- National Institute for Literacy Health and Literacy mailing list HealthLiteracy at nifl.gov To unsubscribe or change your subscription settings, please go to http://www.nifl.gov/mailman/listinfo/healthliteracy Email delivered to mskewes at ria.buffalo.edu -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: http://www.nifl.gov/pipermail/healthliteracy/attachments/20080527/df1dde47/attachment.html
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