Division of General Internal Medicine and Geriatrics, Northwestern Feinberg School of Medicine, Chicago, IL, USA.
J Gen Intern Med. 2012 Feb;27(2):173-8. doi: 10.1007/s11606-011-1886-3. Epub 2011 Oct 5.
Inadequate health literacy is prevalent among seniors and is associated with poor health outcomes. At hospital discharge, medications are frequently changed and patients are informed of these changes via their discharge instructions.
Explore the association between health literacy and medication discrepancies 48 hours after hospital discharge and determine the causes of discharge medication discrepancies.
Face-to-face surveys assessing health literacy at hospital discharge using the short form of the Test of Functional Health Literacy in Adults (sTOFHLA). We obtained the medication lists from the written discharge instructions. At 48 hrs post-discharge, we phoned subjects to assess their current medication regimen, any medication discrepancies, and the causes of the discrepancies.
Two hundred and fifty-four community-dwelling seniors ≥ 70 years, admitted to acute medicine services for >24 hours at an urban hospital.
Of 254 seniors [mean age 79.3 yrs, 53.1% female], 142 (56%) had a medication discrepancy between their discharge instructions and their actual home medication use 48 hrs after discharge. Subjects with inadequate and marginal health literacy were significantly more likely to have unintentional non-adherence--meaning the subject did not understand how to take the medication [inadequate health literacy 47.7% vs. marginal 31.8% vs. adequate 20.5% p = 0.002]. Conversely, those with adequate health literacy were significantly more likely to have intentional non-adherence--meaning the subject understood the instructions but chose not to follow them as a reason for the medications discrepancy compared with marginal and inadequate health literacy [adequate 73.3% vs. marginal 11.1% vs. inadequate 15.6%, p < 0.001]. Another common cause of discrepancies was inaccurate discharge instructions (39.3%).
Seniors with adequate health literacy are more inclined to purposefully not adhere to their discharge instructions. Seniors with inadequate health literacy are more likely to err due to misunderstanding their discharge instructions. Together, these results may explain why previous studies have shown a lack of association between health literacy and overall medication discrepancies.
老年人的健康素养不足较为普遍,且与不良健康结果相关。在出院时,经常会更改药物,患者会通过出院指导了解这些变化。
探讨出院后 48 小时健康素养与药物差异之间的关系,并确定出院药物差异的原因。
在出院时使用成人功能性健康素养测试简短版(sTOFHLA)进行面对面调查,评估健康素养。我们从书面出院医嘱中获取药物清单。在出院后 48 小时,我们致电患者以评估他们当前的药物治疗方案、任何药物差异以及差异的原因。
254 名居住在社区的≥70 岁老年人,在城市医院的内科接受>24 小时的治疗。
在 254 名老年人中[平均年龄 79.3 岁,53.1%为女性],有 142 人(56%)在出院后 48 小时内其出院医嘱与实际家庭用药之间存在药物差异。健康素养不足和边缘的患者更有可能出现非故意不遵医嘱——这意味着患者不了解如何服用药物[健康素养不足者 47.7%,边缘者 31.8%,充分者 20.5%,p=0.002]。相反,具有充分健康素养的患者更有可能故意不遵医嘱——这意味着患者理解了医嘱,但选择不遵循这些医嘱,作为药物差异的原因,与边缘和不足健康素养相比[充分者 73.3%,边缘者 11.1%,不足者 15.6%,p<0.001]。药物差异的另一个常见原因是出院医嘱不准确(39.3%)。
具有充分健康素养的老年人更倾向于故意不遵守出院医嘱。健康素养不足的老年人更有可能因误解出院医嘱而犯错。综上所述,这些结果可能解释了为什么之前的研究表明健康素养与总体药物差异之间缺乏关联。