| Literature DB >> 33081335 |
Elham Charoghchian Khorasani1,2, Seyedeh Belin Tavakoly Sany3,2, Hadi Tehrani3,2, Hassan Doosti4,2, Nooshin Peyman3,2.
Abstract
The term organizational health literacy (OHL) is a new concept that emerged to address the challenge of predominantly in patients with limited health literacy (HL). There is no consensus on how OHL can improve HL activities and health outcomes in healthcare organizations. In this study, a systematic review of the literature was conducted to understand the evidence for the effectiveness of OHL and its health outcome, and the facilitators and barriers that influence the implementation of OHL. A literature search was done using six databases, the gray literature method and reference hand searches. Thirteen potentially articles with data on 1254 health organizations were included. Eight self-assessment tools and ten OHL attributes have been identified. Eleven quality-improvement characteristics and 15 key barriers were reviewed. Evidence on the effectiveness of HL tools provides best practices and recommendations to enhance OHL capacities. Results indicated that shifting to a comprehensive OHL would likely be a complex process because HL is not usually integrated into the healthcare organization's vision and strategic planning. Further development of OHL requires radical, simultaneous, and multiple changes. Thus, there is a need for the healthcare system to consider HL as an organizational priority, that is, be responsive.Entities:
Keywords: barriers; health literacy; health outcome; health-literate healthcare service; organizational health literacy; public health; quality improvement
Mesh:
Year: 2020 PMID: 33081335 PMCID: PMC7589923 DOI: 10.3390/ijerph17207544
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Environ Res Public Health ISSN: 1660-4601 Impact factor: 3.390
Inclusion/Exclusion Criteria.
| Inclusion Criteria | Exclusion Criteria | |
|---|---|---|
| Publication Type | Article, book, guideline, fact sheet, fact book. | There is no limit |
| Setting | Any type of healthcare setting | |
| Dissemination Type | Scientific publications in full-text format, which was published in indexed scientific journals | Full-text articles were not published |
| Outcomes | Publication discusses at least one of the following issues: | Articles not meeting the above criteria were excluded. |
| Language | English | Articles written in languages other than English |
| Time | From inception until November 2019 |
Figure 1Preferred reporting items for systematic reviews (PRISMA) flow diagram.
Characteristic Included Study.
| Authors (Year) | Country | Study Design | Aims | Health Sector | Tools | Outcome | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| Annarummac (2016) [ | Italy | Comparative research | Explore the organizational HL | 60 unite of Pharmacies | AHRQ | Verbal communication, print information materials, and organizational sensitivity to literacy are the core elements for increasing pharmacies’ ability to support low health literate patients. |
|
| Palumbo R. (2014) [ | Italy | Preliminary | Perform explorative study on the tools adopt to improve their hosts’ HL | health care organizations | C-CAT | Health care organizations are still far from effectively activating HL pathways. Systemic efforts to acquire awareness of the issue are strongly needed. |
|
| Groene R.O. (2006) [ | Spain | Preliminary | To pilot an assessment of HL issues within hospital settings. | 10 Hospitals | HLE | Confusion and insecurity condition found throughout health care facilities. Navigation quality, written and oral communication are main elements to support low health literate patients. |
|
| Wieczorek C. (2017) [ | Austria | Qualitative | Develop a self-assessment tool to measure the HL friendliness | 628 youth health clinic | V-HLO | The V-HLO has potential in varied settings beyond health care. |
|
| Trezona A. (2018 [ | Austria | Workshop, review | Develop the OHL self-assessment tool | 4 Primary health Care | Org-HLR | The Org-HLR has potential to assess HL responsiveness strengths, limitations, and quality improvement activities in OHL. |
|
| Henrard G. (2019) [ | Belgium | Pilot study | To translate and culturally adapt HL questionnaire | 5 Hospitals | VHLO | VHLO help hospitals to identify their weaknesses and strengths in terms of HL. |
|
| Hayran O. (2019) [ | Turkey | Cross-sectional study | To investigate organizational HL in hospitals in Istanbul. | 30 hospitals | OHLO/ | Need improvement on providing access, integration, high-risks and costs. OHL improve interpersonal communication and embedded practices. |
|
| Ernstmann N. (2017) [ | Germany | Pilot study | To develop a survey instrument to assess OHL from the patients’ perspective. | 453 patients in cancer centers | HL-COM | The HL-COM is a useful tool to assess HL-sensitive communication or communication skills trainings for health professionals from the patient’s perspective. |
|
| Kowalski C. (2015) [ | Germany | Pilot study | Developing and validating an HLHO instrument. | 51 hospitals | HLHO-10 | HLHO-10 is a useful tool to assess the degree to which health care organizations help patients to understand, navigate, and use information and services. |
|
| Weaver N. (2012) [ | USA | Case Study | To implement and evaluate HL policy action plan | 3 health care organizations | HLE | Low awareness of HL within the organization and variation in perceived values of protocols, inter-staff communication, and patient communication are the main gaps. |
|
| Prince L.Y. (2018) [ | USA | Cross-sectional study | To assess health care practices at an academic health center | Academic Health Centre | HLHO-10 | Need for improvements in health care practices to better assist patients with inadequate HL. |
|
| Wynia M.K. (2010) [ | USA | Cross-sectional study | To explore the relationship between HL status and receiving patient-centered communication | 6 hospitals and 7 health clinics | C-CAT | Improving communication quality in OHL help to address the challenges facing patients with limited HL. |
|
| Wray (2019) [ | USA | Case study | To evaluate a collaborative effort between a health care organization and academic institution to strengthen organizational HL. | Health Care organizations | HLHO-10 | Integrated HL practices into clinic systems, garnered leadership and organizational commitment improve interpersonal communication and embedded practices making health education materials more accessible. |
AHRQ: Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality, C-CAT: communication climate assessment toolkits, V-HLO: Vienna Health Literate Organization, Org-HLR: organizational health literacy self-assessment, OHLO: organizational health literacy observation, HLHO-10: health literate health care organization 10 item questionnaire, HL-COM: health literacy-sensitivity of communication; HLE: health literacy environment of hospitals and health centers.
Characteristics of the Organizational Health Literacy (OHL) Self-Assessment Tools.
| Tools | Attributes | Description |
|---|---|---|
|
| 10: Leadership, integration, workforce, inclusion of the served, HL skills range, communication standards, provide access, media variety, High-risk, costs | (AHRQ) is a 227-page and includes 20 tools or measures with detailed instructions also includes an appendix with 25 additional resources related to addressing HL at the individual level and the system level [ |
|
| 10: Leadership, integration, workforce, inclusion of the served, HL skills range, communication standards, provide access, media variety, high-risk, costs | An instrument measuring OHL from the patients’ perspective. The 16 items rated on a four-point Likert scale ranging from 1 (‘‘I disagree’’) to 4 (‘‘I fully agree’’) [ |
|
| 10: Leadership, integration, workforce, inclusion of the served, HL skills range, communication standards, provide access, media variety, high-risk, costs | In the form, there are questions to evaluate hospitals’ communication systems as well as how user-friendly and health literate their indoor are scores. Ranged from 10 to 40 where high scores indicated a high level of health literacy [ |
|
| 10: Leadership, integration, workforce, inclusion of the served, HL skills range, communication standards, provide access, media variety, high-risk, costs | Survey (10 Likert-scale questions), paper or electronic administration, a self-administered survey that rates OHL practices on a scale of 1 to 7 (‘absolutely not’ –‘to a very large extent’) [ |
|
| 9: Establish management policy and organizational structures of HL, develop materials and services in participation with relevant stakeholders, qualify staff for health-literate communication with patients, provide a supportive environment, apply HL principles in routine communication with patients, improve the HL of patients and significant others, improve the HL of staff, contribute to HL in the region, share experience and be a role model. | The questionnaire comprises 9 standards, 22 sub-standards and 160 items. The V-HLO focuses on HL of patients, healthcare providers, organizations, and populations. |
|
| 7: External policy and funding environment, leadership and culture, systems, processes and policies, access to services and programs, community engagement and partnerships communication practices and standards, workforce. | The self-rating tool was divided into seven assessment dimensions, each of which is made up of 1 to 5 sub-dimensions (24 in total), and 135 performance indicators, were drawn from raw data collected during development of the Org-HLR Framework [ |
|
| 6: Navigation, print communication, oral exchange, technology, policies, protocols. | It is a 164 page and includes measures related to navigation (31 items); print communication (24 items); oral exchange (8 items); availability of patient-facing technologies (18 items); and policies and protocols pertaining to the development and distribution of print materials, using plain language and patients’ native language to communicate and training staff in HL and health communication issues (19 items) [ |
|
| 9: Leadership commitment, information collection, community engagement, workforce development, individual engagement, sociocultural context, language services, health literacy, and performance evaluation. | The C-CAT includes 74 items on the staff survey, the executive leadership survey has 70 items, and the patient survey has 56 items [ |
Quality Improvement Characteristics of OHL Practices.
| Characteristics | 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 | 6 | 7 | 8 | 9 | 10 | 11 | 12 | 13 |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1.Access to services and programs | * | * | |||||||||||
| 2.Leadership and commitment | * | ||||||||||||
| 3. Health literacy is an organizational priority | * | * | * | * | * | * | * | * | |||||
| 4.HL friendliness of environments | * | ||||||||||||
| 5.Continuity and integration of HL practices and care | * | * | |||||||||||
| 6. Communication practices and standards | * | * | * | * | * | * | * | * | * | ||||
| 7.Navigation quality | * | * | |||||||||||
| 8. Workforce | * | * | |||||||||||
| 9. Verbal/written communication skills | * | * | * | * | * | * | * | * | |||||
| 10. Financial management | * | ||||||||||||
| 11. Patient knowledge and engagement | * | * | * | * |
* It is expressed significant characteristics of OHL in each study.
Barriers and Facilitators of OHL.
| Barriers and Facilitators | 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 | 6 | 7 | 8 | 9 | 10 | 11 | 12 | 13 |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1. Poor organizational commitment to HL | * | * | * | * | * | * | * | * | |||||
| 2. Not having enough time and resource constraints | * | * | * | ||||||||||
| 3. Not having policies, procedures, protocols supporting HL practice | * | * | * | * | * | * | |||||||
| 4. The organizations solely focus their attentions on the patient engagement and self-management. | * | * | * | * | |||||||||
| 5. Lake of HL friendliness of environments | * | * | * | ||||||||||
| 6. Poor interactive and linguistic skills (Use of scientific language and abbreviations or inconsistency in the terminology used by staff) | * | * | * | * | * | * | * | ||||||
| 7. Ambiguity of roles among health providers and clinic staff to address the health needs and material | * | * | * | * | * | * | * | ||||||
| 8. Poor verbal/written communication skills | * | * | * | * | |||||||||
| 9. lack of confidence in completing medical forms | * | * | |||||||||||
| 10. Lack of culture of change and innovation | * | * | |||||||||||
| 11. Lake of the patient involvement | * | * | |||||||||||
| 12. Lack of knowledge or training about HL and related activities | * | * | * | * | * | * | * | * | * | ||||
| 13. Poor navigations system (multiple entrances, absence of signs, printed and posted word, visual and physical element) | * | * | * | ||||||||||
| 14. financial circumstances | * |