Armstrong Institute for Safety and Quality, Johns Hopkins Medicine, 750 East Pratt St., 15th floor, Baltimore, MD, 21202, USA,
J Gen Intern Med. 2013 Nov;28(11):1469-76. doi: 10.1007/s11606-013-2466-5. Epub 2013 May 21.
Low health literacy (HL) is associated with poor healthcare outcomes; mechanisms for these associations remain unclear.
To elucidate how HL influences patients' interest in participating in healthcare, medical visit communication, and patient reported visit outcomes.
DESIGN, SETTING, AND PATIENTS: Cross-sectional study of enrollment data from a randomized controlled trial of interventions to improve patient adherence to hypertension treatments. Participants were 41 primary care physicians and 275 of their patients. Prior to the enrollment visit, physicians received a minimal intervention or communication skills training and patients received a minimal intervention or a pre-visit coaching session. This resulted in four intervention groups (minimal patient/minimal physician; minimal patient/intensive physician; intensive patient/minimal physician; and intensive patient/intensive physician).
Rapid Estimate of Adult Literacy in Medicine; patients' desire for involvement in decision making; communication behaviors; patient ratings of participatory decision making (PDM), trust, and satisfaction.
A lower percentage of patients with low versus adequate literacy had controlled blood pressure. Both groups were similarly interested in participating in medical decision making. Communication behaviors did not differ based on HL except for medical question asking by patients, which was lower among low literacy patients. This was particularly true in the intensive patient /intensive physician group (3.85 vs. 6.42 questions; p = 0.002). Overall, ratings of care didn't differ based on HL; however, in analyses stratified by intervention assignment, patients with low literacy in minimal physician intervention groups reported significantly lower PDM scores than adequate literacy patients.
Patients with low and adequate literacy were similarly interested in participating in medical decision making. However, low literacy patients were less likely to experience PDM in their visits. Low literacy patients in the intensive physician intervention groups asked fewer medical questions. Patients with low literacy may be less able to respond to physicians' use of patient-centered communication approaches than adequate literacy patients.
健康素养水平(HL)较低与较差的医疗保健结果相关;这些关联的机制尚不清楚。
阐明 HL 如何影响患者参与医疗保健的兴趣、医疗就诊沟通以及患者报告的就诊结果。
设计、地点和患者:一项横断面研究,纳入了一项旨在改善高血压治疗患者依从性的干预措施的随机对照试验的入组数据。参与者包括 41 名初级保健医生和他们的 275 名患者。在入组就诊前,医生接受了最小干预或沟通技巧培训,患者接受了最小干预或就诊前辅导。这导致了四个干预组(最小患者/最小医生;最小患者/强化医生;强化患者/最小医生;强化患者/强化医生)。
成人简易医学素养快速评估;患者对参与决策的渴望;沟通行为;患者对参与式决策制定(PDM)、信任和满意度的评分。
与具有足够读写能力的患者相比,具有较低读写能力的患者血压控制率较低。两组患者对参与医疗决策的兴趣相似。除了患者提出的医疗问题较少外,HL 对沟通行为没有影响,而在读写能力较低的患者中,这一点尤其明显(强化患者/强化医生组的问题数为 3.85 个,而强化患者/最小医生组为 6.42 个;p = 0.002)。总体而言,HL 对护理评分没有影响;然而,在按干预分配分层的分析中,在最小医生干预组中,读写能力较低的患者报告的 PDM 评分明显低于读写能力足够的患者。
具有低读写能力和足够读写能力的患者对参与医疗决策的兴趣相似。然而,低读写能力患者在就诊过程中体验到 PDM 的可能性较低。强化医生干预组中,读写能力较低的患者提出的医疗问题较少。与读写能力足够的患者相比,读写能力较低的患者可能对医生使用以患者为中心的沟通方法的反应能力较差。