| Literature DB >> 30464420 |
Marie A Chisholm-Burns1, Christina A Spivey2, Logan R Pickett1.
Abstract
Optimizing wellness and health are the most critical goals for patients post solid-organ transplantation. Low health literacy has important implications for wellness and health, increasing patient risk for negative health outcomes. More than 30% of the general US patient population has low health literacy, and solid-organ transplant recipients (SOTRs) may be especially vulnerable to low health literacy and its adverse impact on health outcomes. A comprehensive literature review was conducted and a model was adapted to better depict factors associated with low health literacy. Based on the Paasche-Orlow and Wolf model of health literacy, the Health Literacy Model in Transplantation (HeaL-T) provides a foundation to visually demonstrate the relationships among variables associated with low health literacy and to develop evidence-based strategies to improve care. The model depicts a number of patient and healthcare level factors associated with health literacy, several of which have bi-directional or reciprocal relationships, including access and utilization of healthcare, provider-patient interaction, and self-management/adherence. The impact of these factors and their relationships to SOTR outcomes are reviewed. The HeaL-T represents an important step in developing holistic understanding of the complexity of health literacy in SOTRs and offers clinicians a base from which to design strategies to mitigate adverse health effects including increased hospitalizations, graft failure, and mortality.Entities:
Keywords: health literacy; health outcomes; healthcare access; interventions; medication adherence; solid-organ transplantation
Year: 2018 PMID: 30464420 PMCID: PMC6229143 DOI: 10.2147/PPA.S183092
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Patient Prefer Adherence ISSN: 1177-889X Impact factor: 2.711
Figure 1Health literacy model in transplantation (HeaL-T): patient-level factors, healthcare-level factors, and outcomes associated with health literacy in the solid-organ transplant population.a,15,16
Notes: Health literacy is associated with several patient-level (eg, age, cognitive function) and caregiver factors. Health literacy also influences, and is influenced by, caregiver and healthcare-level factors including access and utilization of healthcare, provider-patient interaction, and self-management/adherence. These factors may also influence each other; for example, a patient’s adherence may be influenced by an interaction with a provider. Health outcomes are affected by all of these factors that stem from health literacy, and these outcomes can also influence healthcare-level factors as well as health literacy. For example, a patient who does not understand how to take his/her medication (health literacy), and is thus nonadherent (healthcare-level factor), is hospitalized (outcome). During the hospitalization (outcome), the patient has an effective educational interaction with a provider (healthcare-level factor) and develops an understanding of why and how to take his/her medication (health literacy). Going forward, the patient’s adherence increases and his/her outcomes improve. The HeaL-T is adapted with permission from Paasche-Orlow MK, Wolf MS. The causal pathways linking health literacy to health outcomes. Am J Health Behav. 2007;31(Suppl 1):S19–S26.15 aStudies from both the general population and transplant population were reviewed, particularly when literature in the transplant population was scarce.
Relationships between patient-level factors and health literacy
| Low health literacy is associated with: |
|---|
| • Older age |
Note:
Association with health literacy primarily based on reviews of studies in the general patient population when transplant studies were scarce or non-existent.
Intervention strategies, tools, and resources to address low health literacy9,22,91–105,108–110
| Intervention strategies, tools, and resources |
|---|
| • Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality (AHRQ) Health Literacy Universal Precautions Toolkit: |
| • Health Literacy Tool Shed: |
| • Readability Test Tool: |
| • Assign caseworker to each patient to provide health literacy support to patients and caregivers |
| • Conduct multiple assessments of patient and caregiver health literacy, pre- and posttransplant, to better target intervention strategies |
| • Implement interprofessional (eg, physician, nurse, pharmacist) team-based approach to patient-centered care |
| • Provide trained interpreters for patients whose primary language is not English |
| • Train healthcare providers to improve skills in working with patients with low health literacy |
| • Use open-ended questions and Teach-Back |
| • Universal precautions |
| • Written materials: |
| • Alternate teaching methods: |
| • Technology/mobile health tools and interventions |
| • Additional tools to support self-management/adherence: |