Title: The PILL Study
1The PILL Study
Pharmacy Intervention for Limited Literacy Kara
L. Jacobson, MPH, CHES Julie A. Gazmararian, PhD,
MPH Sunil Kripalani, MD, MSc Karen J. McMorris,
BA Sarah Blake, MA Cindy Brach, MPP
2Study Purpose
- To improve medication adherence in patients with
limited health literacy. - To assess economic impact of increased refill
adherence and decreased use of health care
services. - To measure secondary outcomes (pt self-reported
adherence, med understanding) - Uses a systems approach
3Study Phases
- Phase 1
- Assessment of the pharmacy
- Phase 2
- Implementation of a 3 P intervention
- Phase 3
- Outcome evaluation of intervention
4Phase 1 The Assessment
- A health literacy assessment can help your
pharmacy to meet the needs of your
limited-literacy patients by - Raising staff awareness
- Detecting barriers to effectively using your
services - Identifying opportunities for improvement
5What Does a Pharmacy Health Literacy Assessment
Involve?
- This assessment tool includes 3 parts
- Part 1 Pharmacy assessment tour
- Part 2 Pharmacy staff survey
- Part 3 Patient focus groups
- This tool was adapted from Literacy Albertas
Health Literacy Audit Kit3
3. Literacy-Alberta. The Literacy Audit Kit.
Calgary Literacy Alberta 1997.
6Before Conducting a Health Literacy Assessment
- Obtain staff support
- Consider demographic information about the staff
and patient populations - Consider adding or deleting assessment items
7Part 1 Assessment Tour
- Objective assessors identify existing barriers in
these areas - Promotion of Services
- Print Materials
- Clear Verbal Communication
- Will take 20-30 minutes to complete
- Should be completed during both busy and less
busy times in the pharmacy
8Part 1 Assessment TourWho Should Conduct the
Assessment?
- Assessment will be conducted by trained,
objective assessors who are - Familiar with the principles of clear health
communication - Not pharmacy staff or patients
- Able to blend in with patients who use the
pharmacy - At least 2 per pharmacy
- Should be trained together
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10Part 1 Assessment TourConducting the Assessment
- Full guide available at http//www.ahrq.gov/qual/
pharmlit/
11Part 2 Survey of Pharmacy Staff
- Staff members help create the environment within
the pharmacy and have a unique perspective - Evaluates staff opinions of pharmacys
sensitivity to the needs of limited-literacy
patients in three areas - Print Materials
- Clear Verbal Communication
- Sensitivity to Literacy
- Will take about 20 minutes to complete
12Who Should Complete the Pharmacy Staff Survey?
- Small staff all staff members can complete the
survey - Large staff select a representative, random
sample - Emphasize importance of completing the survey
thoroughly!
13Part 3 Pharmacy Patient Focus Groups
- Ask pharmacy patients about their personal
experiences in 4 areas - Physical Environment
- Care Process and Workforce
- Paperwork and Written Communication
- Culture
- Conduct 2 focus groups of 10-12 patients, 2 hours
each
14Part 3 Who Should Participate in the Focus
Groups?
- Recruit patients directly from pharmacy
- Patients should use the pharmacy regularly and
manage their own medications
15Why is it Important to Use a 3-Part Assessment
Tool?
- Mixed method approach more comprehensive than a
single method approach - Limitations resulting from the use of only one
method often produce bias4, 5 - Pharmacists underreport counseling events when
self-reporting compared to counseling events
documented by observers6,7 - Pharmacy patient recall bias decreases reporting
of specific counseling activities
4. De Young M. A Review of the Research on
Pharmacists' Patient-Communication Views and
Practices. Am.J. Pharm. Educ. 19966060-77. 5.
Laurier C, Poston J. Perceived levels of
counseling among Canadian pharmacists. J Soc .
Admin. Pharm. 19929104-113. 6. Kirking DM.
Pharmacists' perceptions of their patient
counseling activities. Contemp Pharm Pract.
19825(4)230-238. 7. Raisch D. Patient
counseling in community pharmacy and its
relationship with prescription payment methods
and practice settings. Ann Pharmacother.
1993271173-1179.
16Results from an Assessment of a Public Hospital
Pharmacy
- Assessment conducted in February - March 2006
- Used as a baseline measure before implementing a
health literacy intervention in the pharmacy
17Results from an Assessment of a Public Hospital
Pharmacy
- Patient Counseling What the Pharmacists Said
- 65.5 of pharmacists felt confident in their
ability to counsel patients with numerous
questions - 55.2 felt that they could effectively counsel
patients when time was limited
18Results from an Assessment of a Public Hospital
Pharmacy
- Patient Counseling What the Patients Said
- I try not to ask any questions unless its
absolutely necessaryI get the feeling that they
already overworked and whatever and they really
dont feel like answering questions. - Counseling time is enough because I already
should know something about my medicines and
that pamphlet can tell me a lot more than he can
tell me.
19Results from an Assessment of a Public Hospital
Pharmacy
- Print Materials What the Pharmacists Said
- 57.1 indicated that prescription bottle labels
and warning labels are easy for their
limited-literacy patients to understand - 42.9 agreed that prescription informational
inserts are easy for adults with limited literacy
skills to understand
20Results from an Assessment of a Public Hospital
Pharmacy
- Print Materials What the Patients Said
- Rely heavily on printed materials for information
about their medicines - I love those informational inserts.
-
- Find the print on these materials difficult to
read - Little type, little print across there the
bottle label. You can barely, hardly read it.
21Results from an Assessment of a Public Hospital
Pharmacy
- Print Materials What the Assessors Said
- All agreed that the pharmacy could make
improvements in providing clearly written
information inserts - None felt that the information inserts were easy
to understand - All agreed that the pharmacy could make
improvements in providing clearly written bottle
labels
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23Hospital Signage
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25Results from an Assessment of a Public Hospital
Pharmacy
- As results show, people in different roles
(staff, patients, outside observers) have
different perspectives.
26Weve Assessed, Now What?
- Launch the Intervention
- 3 P Approach
- Reminder Phone calls
- Pharmacist Training
- Picture Prescription
27Participants
- 1600 adult, English-speaking patients who get
their medication filled at Grady Hospital - Participants must have received regular pharmacy
services atGrady for a minimum of6 months
28Telephone Reminder System
- Integrated into the existing refill call line
- Calls 5-8 days before a script is due for refill
29Pharmacist Training
- All Grady pharmacists received training in clear
health communication - When patients pick up their prescriptions, they
should be counseled on their medications by
pharmacists trained to communicate with
limited-literacy patients
30PILL Pharmacist Training
- Explain things clearly in plain language
- Focus on key messages and repeat
- Use a teach back or show me technique to
check understanding - Effectively solicit questions
- Use patient-friendly educational materials to
enhance interaction
31Using Plain LanguageWhat could we say instead
of
- Adverse reaction
- Hypoglycemia
- Ophthalmic use only
- PRN
- Suppository
- Topical
32PictureRx
- When study patients pick up their prescriptions,
they will receive a pill card. - The card will provide
- list of all of the patients medications
- pictures of the pills
- information on what the medication is for
- graphic instructions on how/when to take it.
33PictureRx
- Based on research and practice at Grady
- Further developed for Grady and PILL study
- Automated solution to facilitate counseling
- Displays patients regimen in picture form
- Explains regimen, also reminds patient
- Easy to understand, take-home aid
- Punch-out wallet card
Disclosure Dr. Kripalani is a consultant to and
holds equity in PictureRx, LLC. He is entitled to
revenues from future product sales. He will not
receive any compensation from Grady or Emory
through the PILL study.
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36Perceived Value of anIllustrated Medication
Schedule
Helped patients remember
Kripalani et al, Prev Med 2004
37Phase 3 Outcome Measures
- Through one-on-one interviews, the study
- assessed participants
- Understanding of their medications
- Medication adherence as measured through refill
compliance - Confidence in their ability to correctly take
their medicines - Health status, social support, and health
literacy - Level of satisfaction with pharmacy services
received during the study
38What Resources Can Help Make a Pharmacy More
Literacy-Friendly?
- AHRQ Tools
- Strategies To Improve Communication Between
Pharmacy Staff and Patients Training Program for
Pharmacy Staff - Introduce pharmacists to the problem of low
health literacy in patient populations -
- Identify the implications of this problem for the
delivery of health care services - Explain techniques that pharmacy staff members
can use to improve communication with patients
who may have limited health literacy skills
- http//www.ahrq.gov/qual/pharmlit/pharmtrain.htm
39What Resources Can Help Make a Pharmacy More
Literacy-Friendly?
- AHRQ Tools
- How to Create a Pill Card
- Guide to help users create an easy-to-use "pill
card" for patients, parents, or anyone who has a
hard time keeping track of their medicines - Step-by-step instructions, sample clip art, and
suggestions for design and use will help to
customize a reminder card
http//www.ahrq.gov/qual/pillcard/pillcard.htm
40What Resources Can Help Make a Pharmacy More
Literacy-Friendly?
- Automated Telephone Reminders
- A Tool to Help Refill Medicines On Time
- Easy-to-understand telephone script
- Automated refill reminder calls to patients
remind them to refill their prescriptions - Calls also allow patients to order the refill on
the phone
- http//www.ahrq.gov/qual/callscript.htm
41Your Action Steps
- How can you
- use these tools
- in your organization?