Menendez Mariano E, van Hoorn Bastiaan T, Mackert Michael, Donovan Erin E, Chen Neal C, Ring David
Department of Orthopaedic Surgery, Tufts Medical Center, Tufts University School of Medicine, 800 Washington Street, TMC Box #306, Boston, MA, 02111, USA.
Department of Orthopaedic Surgery, Massachusetts General Hospital, Harvard Medical School, Boston, MA, USA.
Clin Orthop Relat Res. 2017 May;475(5):1291-1297. doi: 10.1007/s11999-016-5140-5. Epub 2016 Oct 28.
In the midst of rapid expansion of medical knowledge and decision-support tools intended to benefit diverse patients, patients with limited health literacy (the ability to obtain, process, and understand information and services to make health decisions) will benefit from asking questions and engaging actively in their own care. But little is known regarding the relationship between health literacy and question-asking behavior during outpatient office visits.
QUESTIONS/PURPOSES: (1) Do patients with lower levels of health literacy ask fewer questions in general, and as stratified by types of questions? (2) What other patient characteristics are associated with the number of questions asked? (3) How often do surgeons prompt patients to ask questions during an office visit?
We audio-recorded office visits of 84 patients visiting one of three orthopaedic hand surgeons for the first time. Patient questions were counted and coded using an adaptation of the Roter Interaction Analysis System in 11 categories: (1) therapeutic regimen; (2) medical condition; (3) lifestyle; (4) requests for services or medications; (5) psychosocial/feelings; (6) nonmedical/procedural; (7) asks for understanding; (8) asks for reassurance; (9) paraphrase/checks for understanding; (10) bid for repetition; and (11) personal remarks/social conversation. Directly after the visit, patients completed the Newest Vital Sign (NVS) health literacy test, a sociodemographic survey (including age, sex, race, work status, marital status, insurance status), and three Patient-Reported Outcomes Measurement Information System-based questionnaires: Upper-Extremity Function, Pain Interference, and Depression. The NVS scores were divided into limited (0-3) and adequate (4-6) health literacy as done by the tool's creators. We also assessed whether the surgeons prompted patients to ask questions during the encounter.
Patients with limited health literacy asked fewer questions than patients with adequate health literacy (5 ± 4 versus 9 ± 7; mean difference, -4; 95% CI, -7 to -1; p = 0.002). More specifically, patients with limited health literacy asked fewer questions regarding medical-care issues such as their therapeutic regimen (1 ± 2 versus 3 ± 4; mean difference, -2; 95% CI, -4 to -1]; p < 0.001) and condition (2 ± 2 versus 3 ± 3; mean difference, -1; 95% CI, -3 to 0; p = 0.022). Nonwhite patients asked fewer questions than did white patients (5 ± 4 versus 9 ± 7; mean difference, -4; 95% CI, -7 to 0; p = 0.032). No other patient characteristics were associated with the number of questions asked. Surgeons only occasionally (29%; 24/84) asked patients if they had questions during the encounter, but when they did, most patients (79%; 19/24) asked questions.
Limited health literacy is a barrier to effective patient engagement in hand surgery care. In the increasingly tangled health-information environment, it is important to actively involve patients with limited health literacy in the decision-making process by encouraging question-asking, particularly in practice settings where most decisions are preference-sensitive. Instead of assuming that patients understand what they are told, orthopaedic surgeons may take "universal precautions" by assuming that patients do not understand unless proved otherwise.
Level II, therapeutic study.
在旨在惠及各类患者的医学知识和决策支持工具迅速扩展的背景下,健康素养有限(获取、处理和理解信息及服务以做出健康决策的能力)的患者将从提问并积极参与自身护理中受益。但关于门诊就诊期间健康素养与提问行为之间的关系,人们知之甚少。
问题/目的:(1)健康素养水平较低的患者总体上提问较少吗?按问题类型分层后情况如何?(2)还有哪些患者特征与提问数量相关?(3)外科医生在门诊就诊期间促使患者提问的频率如何?
我们对首次拜访三位骨科手外科医生之一的84名患者的门诊就诊进行了录音。使用Roter互动分析系统的改编版对患者的问题进行计数和编码,分为11类:(1)治疗方案;(2)医疗状况;(3)生活方式;(4)服务或药物请求;(5)心理社会/感受;(6)非医疗/程序;(7)寻求理解;(8)寻求安心;(9)释义/检查理解;(10)请求重复;(11)个人言论/社交对话。就诊结束后,患者立即完成最新生命体征(NVS)健康素养测试、社会人口学调查(包括年龄、性别、种族、工作状况、婚姻状况、保险状况)以及三份基于患者报告结局测量信息系统的问卷:上肢功能、疼痛干扰和抑郁。按照该工具创建者的做法,将NVS分数分为健康素养有限(0 - 3分)和充足(4 - 6分)两类。我们还评估了外科医生在就诊期间是否促使患者提问。
健康素养有限的患者比健康素养充足的患者提问更少(5±4 比 9±7;平均差异为 -4;95%可信区间为 -7 至 -1;p = 0.002)。更具体地说,健康素养有限的患者就医疗护理问题提问较少,比如他们的治疗方案(1±2 比 3±4;平均差异为 -2;95%可信区间为 -4 至 -1;p < 0.001)和病情(2±2 比 3±3;平均差异为 -1;95%可信区间为 -3 至 0;p = 0.022)。非白人患者比白人患者提问更少(5±4 比 9±7;平均差异为 -4;95%可信区间为 -7 至 0;p = 0.032)。没有其他患者特征与提问数量相关。外科医生在就诊期间仅偶尔(29%;24/84)询问患者是否有问题,但当他们这样做时,大多数患者(79%;19/24)会提问。
健康素养有限是患者有效参与手外科护理的障碍。在日益复杂的健康信息环境中,通过鼓励提问,积极让健康素养有限的患者参与决策过程很重要,尤其是在大多数决策对偏好敏感的实际环境中。骨科医生不应假定患者理解所告知的内容,而可以采取“普遍预防措施”,即除非能证明患者理解,否则假定他们不理解。
二级,治疗性研究。