Title: Beyond the SEA - National Tele-discussion
1THE ESSENTIAL ROLE OF HEALTH CARE LITERACY IN THE
MEDICAL TEAM
- Beyond the SEA - National Tele-discussion
- Erin M. Dunbar, MD
- edunbar_at_neurosurgery.ufl.edu 352-273-9000
2A Special
To Teleconference hosts and participants Colleagu
es and co-investigators Patients, caregivers, and
care teams
3Disclosures
Scientific Advisor Genentech Journal Editorials,
Reviews Book Chapters
4Objectives
- Interdisciplinary Health Care Teams
- Example at UF
- Increasing Tasks Decreasing Time Tools
- Huge Unmet Need
- Health Care Literacy From All For All
- Health Care Literacy Around the World
- Health Care Literacy Initiatives at UF
- Forward Together
5Definition of Health Care Literacy
- Health Care Literacy (HCL) or Health Literacy
(HL) is defined by the WHO as 'the cognitive and
social skills which determine the motivation and
ability of individuals to gain access to,
understand, and use information in ways which
promote and maintain good health. - Gap between the definition its application
- Three levels functional, communicative, critical
- Research is needed to develop measures of HL and
measure the interaction of the patient HL within
health and social contexts (Instit of Medicine,
03)
Patient health literacy and participation in the
health-care process. Ishikawa H, Yano E Health
Expect. 6/2008 Health literacy revisited what
do we mean and why does it matter? Peerson A,
Saunders M, Health Promot Int. 4/09
6Interdisciplinary Health Care Multiple Modalities
7Multiple Locations
8Multiple Tools
9Increasing Tasks Decreasing Tools
- Diagnosis
- Anatomy Function
- Disease Course
- Treatments (2nd opinions, multi-modality,
trials vs. routine) - Medical Terminology
- Symptom Management
- Prognosis
- Financial Assistance
- Coping Emotional
- Work-related Issues
- Caregiver Children
- Family Dynamics
- Increasing Complexity of Care
- Decreasing Continuity of Care
- Travel difficulties
- Money
- Immobility
- Working caregiver
- Declining Reimbursement
- Vanishing Time Allowance
- 15 minute office visit!
- Long distances between Loves ones
- Unregulated Enormous Resources
- Internet
- Blogs
Huge Unmet Need!
10Huge Unmet Need
- Dramatic medical financial implications
- Medicare claims from 20032004 (11 million)
- 19.6 were re-hospitalized within 30 days.
- 50 no MD visit from discharge to re-admit.
- 34. were re-admitted within 90 days.
- Unplanned re-admits 17.4 billion in 2004.
- Lack of education during discharge planning and
subsequent physician office visits were
implicated as causative.
- Re-hospitalizations among Patients in the
Medicare Fee-for-Service Program, NEJM, 1/09,
Stephen F. Jencks, M.D., M.P.H., Mark V.
Williams, M.D.,and Eric A. Coleman, M.D., M.P.H.
11Huge Unmet Needs
- Identification of educational needs is important,
but the how to is inadequate - A new diagnosis has deep lasting effects
- Emotional, social, physical limitations
- Formal information support services are needed
for coping - Little is known about how routine practices
influence patients' experience
1. Patient care at diagnosis a planned education
approach. Vile C, Nurs Stand. 3/04 2. How does
current care practice influence the experience of
a new diagnosis of motor neuron disease? A
qualitative study of current guidelines-based
practice. Hugel H, et al, Amyotroph Lateral
Scler. 9/06 3. Identifying the educational needs
and concerns of newly diagnosed patients with
breast cancer after surgery. Stephens PA, et al
Clin J Oncol Nurs. 4/08
12Huge Unmet Need
- Contd
- Major themes
- Communication of the diagnosis
- Formal support
- Information specific needs
- Coordinated services
- Healthcare system is inadequate
- Importance of a interdisciplinary, coordinated
approach
1. Patient care at diagnosis a planned education
approach. Vile C, Nurs Stand. 3/04 2. How does
current care practice influence the experience of
a new diagnosis of motor neuron disease? A
qualitative study of current guidelines-based
practice. Hugel H, et al, Amyotroph Lateral
Scler. 9/06 3. Identifying the educational needs
and concerns of newly diagnosed patients with
breast cancer after surgery. Stephens PA, et al
Clin J Oncol Nurs. 4/08
13Unmet Needs
- Patient/caregiver self-seeking information is
inadequate - Internet information seeking behaviors of parents
whose children have life-threatening illnesses
N129, phone survey, pediatric palliative care - 75 parents used internet, 64 used daily
- Never used Hispanic (50), less than high school
educ. (64) (P??0.02) - Despite high levels of e-health literacy they
are not confident or are unsure about the quality
of information on the Internet
Knapp, CShenkman, E, Pediatr Blood Cancer. 2011
May56(5)805-11. doi 10.1002/pbc.22674. Epub
2010 Dec 7.
14Unmet Need
- Patients ability to use information is
inadequate - Health literacy the provision of information to
women with breast cancer - Key information on treatment complications and
clinical trials is often imparted using written
educational material - Study of functional HL vs. the level of written
information provided, cross-sectional survey - HL levels reading level of written patient
information were high, yet 9 of patients would
be unable to read the information provided - Functional HL levels were lower, with 19
inadequate - Patient educ. materials must be written at an
appropriate level and different modalities of
communication should be used to ensure adequate
comprehension
Reference
15Unmet Needs
- Provider public-derived information is
inadequate - Attitudes to Colorectal Cancer Screening After
Reading the Prevention Information, N42, gt50yo,
questionnaire - Barriers to increase colorectal cancer screening
are negative attitudes to screening tests - Negative attitudes were evoked through reading
cancer prevention information and impede the
decision to get screened - Additional education about self-relevance of
cancer risk is necessary - Further research in individuals with limited HL
is recommended
Liu, CJ et al, J Cancer Educ. 2011 Mar 1
16Unmet Need
- Current Health Care, Government Industry
provided information inadequate possibly
harmful - Cancer-related direct-to-consumer advertising a
review - The direct-to-consumer advertising (DTCA) reaches
out to consumers by bypassing important
gatekeepers, e.g., physicians. - The emergence of new information platforms and
the introduction of genetic tests directly to the
consumer have heightened the concern with DTCA
and its potential consequences. - These effects of DTCA are particularly important
given the communication inequalities among social
groups, with class, race and ethnicity
influencing how people access, seek, process and
act on information.
Kontos, EZ, Nat Rev Cancer. 2011 Feb11(2)142-50
17HEALTH CARE LITERACY IS ESSENTIAL TO THE MEDICAL
TEAM
18KNOWLEDGE IS ESSENTIAL TO HEALING
19Health Care Literacy From For All
- Information Technology (IT)
- Studies only basic computer skills needed
- Attitudes of health professional to the
- development of IT in practice matters!
- Need for flexibility, appropriate education
training - Need for the software to be 'fit for purpose
- Need to carefully plan the introduction of
IT-based systems into work practices
1. Information literacy-what it is about?
Literature review of the concept and the context.
Saranto K,et al. Int J Med Inform. 6/04. 2. The
attitudes of health care staff to information
technology a comprehensive review of the
research literature. Ward R, et al. Health Info
Libr J. 6/08
20Health Care Literacy From For All
- Internet other virtual media
- Critical factors in optimizing cancer
communication for diverse audiences - literacy, cultural, and linguistic issues
- Significant unmet needs
- low-literate, multicultural, non-English-speaking
- Emphasizes the importance of understanding the
strengths and weaknesses of online cancer
communication for vulnerable groups - guide patients to better Websites
- supplement that information with oral and
tailored communication.
1. Online cancer communication meeting the
literacy, cultural and linguistic needs of
diverse audiences. Neuhauser L, Patient Educ
Couns. 6/08 2. Evidence-based resources and the
role of librarians in developing evidence-based
practice curricula. Klem ML. J Prof Nurs. 12/05
21Health Care Literacy From For All
- Internet other virtual media, contd
- Development Introduction of Technologies
- Requires the acquisition and use of a complex set
of skills - Ability to access understand the technology
- Ability to locate and critically evaluate
relevant material - Benefits of health sciences librarians!
1. Online cancer communication meeting the
literacy, cultural and linguistic needs of
diverse audiences. Neuhauser L, Patient Educ
Couns. 6/08 2. Evidence-based resources and the
role of librarians in developing evidence-based
practice curricula. Klem ML. J Prof Nurs. 12/05
22Tools for HCL
- Websites, including click-key analysis
- Written materials
- Scales
- Surveys questionnaires
- Focus groups interviews
- Electronic data capture with a central system
that allows for real-time interaction as well as
virtual review and analysis - Hand Held Device or digital pen
- IVR (Interactive Voice Response)
- Internet Web
- Medical devices (glucometers, breathalyzers)
http//www.phtcorp.com/why_epro/what_is_epro/
23Health Care Literacy From For All
- Trainees need to be competent in health literacy
- Example ACGME Core Competencies
- Medical Knowledge
- Practice-based Learning and Improvement
- appraise and assimilate scientific evidence
- Interpersonal and Communication Skills
- effective exchange of information and
collaboration with patients, their families, and
health professionals - Systems-based Practice
- responsiveness to the system of health care
- ability to call effectively on resources and
optimize inter-professional teams
Accreditation Council for Graduate Medical
Education www.acgme.org Patient-doctor
communication. Teutsch C. Med Clin North Am 2003
2. ww.acgme.org/outcome/comp/GeneralCompetenciesSt
andards21307.pdf
24Health Care Literacy From For All
- Patient Caregiver
- Caregivers play a significant role in diagnosis
treatment. - The extent to which caregivers can comprehend the
health information they receive is critical - Targeted, practical info provided directly to
caregivers - Caregivers patients interactions need
improvement - Modern healthcare demands a high level of health
literacy to successfully manage disease - Older adults may be at a distinct disadvantage
- New strategies are needed to compensate for these
losses - creating a health care environment of shared
meaning and understanding tailored to the aging
patient
1. Understanding the impact of family caregiver
cancer literacy on patient health outcomes. Bevan
JL, Patient Educ Couns. 6/08 2. Health literacy
and cancer communication with older adults.
Sparks L, Patient Educ Couns. 4/08
25Health Care Literacy From For All
- Health Sciences Librarian
- Identifying optimizing skills
- Basis for a training program model that reflects
changes in both health care delivery
information technology - All surveyed groups rated as most important
- Personality characteristics
- Skills Understanding of the health sciences
Education Research Technical skills - Continuing professional development is required
- Emphasis on teaching skills, outreach work,
marketing and promotion, research skills and
methods, subject knowledge and terminology, and
management skills.
1. Preparing librarians to meet the challenges of
today's health care environment. Giuse NB, et al.
J Am Med Inform Assoc. 1/97. 2. The education and
training needs of health librarians - the
generalist versus specialist dilemma. Petrinic T,
Health Info Libr J. 9/07
26Health Care Literacy From For All
- Health Science Librarians
- Provide information literacy training to health
care professionals, patients, caregivers - (AND SO MUCH MORE)
- Research is needed to show it improves
clinicians' information skills patient care - Selecting appropriate measures to evaluate the
impact of training - Demonstrating validity and reliability
- Providing guidance to health librarians health
care system
Evaluating information skills training in health
libraries a systematic review. Brettle A Health
Info Libr J. 12/07
27Health Care Literacy Around the World
28HCL in Health Care Reform
- Patient Protection Affordable Health Care Act
(PPACA) - Hundreds of New Committees and Mandates
- Accountable care organizations (ACOs)
- quality metrics
- New Metrics Needed (Seek provider input)
- Patient individualization (HCL)
- Prioritization , academic, clinical,
- technology incorporation, etc.
Resources www.healthcare.gov specialty
society websites
Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act
(PPACA) of 2010, (P.L. 111-148 H.R. 3590, Sec.
10103(c)-Sec. 2709.) ASCO POST Proceedings,
2010
29HCL in PPACA
- Patient-Centered Research Outcomes Institute
- Assist patients, clinicians, purchasers,
policy-makers - Improve evidence on prevention, diagnosis,
treatment - Identify, prioritize, carry out the agenda
- Includes trial design conductance
- Standing Methodology Committee
- Goal comparative effectiveness
- Center for Medicare Medicaid Innovation
- Interagency Working Group on Health Care Quality
- Consumer Advocacy Council
- Advisory Committees On Public Education (various)
- Nat. Prevention, Health Promotion Public Health
Council
Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act
(PPACA) of 2010
30Health Care Literacy Around the US
- Academic Examples of Health Literacy Programs
- University of Wisconsin, Madisons Comprehensive
Health Enhancement Support System (CHESS) - http//chess.wisc.edu/chess/
- Computer-based system of integrated services
designed to help individuals cope with a health
crisis or medical concern - Research has demonstrated an increased quality of
life in groups of cancer patients - http//chess.wisc.edu/chess/publications/archives_
prj.aspx - Dartmouth-Hitchkock Medical Centers Shared
Decision Making Center - http//www.dhmc.org
- Many others........YOURS?
31Health Care Literacy Initiatives at UF
Gwen Lombard, Erin Dunbar, Beth Layton, Nita
Ferree, (Salvatore Savona, many others) now, OH
32Health Care Literacy Initiatives at UF
- Diverse Collaborations
- Health Professions
- College of Public Health Health Professions
- Department of Behavioral Science and Community
Health - Journalism Communication
- Preston A. Wells, Jr. Center for Brain Tumor
Therapy - Department of Neurological Surgery
- UF Shands Cancer Center Education Resource
Center - Health Science Libraries
- Volunteer patient or caregiver
- Resident or other trainee
- Social worker
- Department of Pharmacy
- Nursing Services, etc.
33Health Care Literacy Initiatives at UF
- Identification of Needs
- Patient, caregiver, trainees, health care
professionals, librarians, hospital, library, etc - Pilot data
- Focused groups, surveys
- Create Promote Connections
- Implement Programs
- Measure Effects Scientifically
- Refinement
- Advisory committees, research results
- Establish Best Practice Model
- Funding
34Health Care Literacy Initiatives at UF
- Needs Goals of UF
- Create unique learning partnerships
- Promote proactive inquiry self-directed
learning - Information Prescription
- Comprehensive, High-quality, Up-to-date
- Clinical Informationalist (Health Info
Engineer) - Point-of-need, help for diverse needs
- Immersed Librarian (Sewell Foundation Grant)
- Virtual, Transferable
- Mobile Education Cart (wireless
computer/printer) - Informed Cancer Patients Website novel
educational materials
35(No Transcript)
36Unmet Need AddressedHCL for Brain
TumorPatients, Caregivers, House-staff, Staff
- Focus Group Research
- Internet Informed Cancer Patients program
- Info Rx Resource Rx interactive
questionnaires - Mobile education cart education room
- Grant applications
- House-staff education initiatives
37Exploring the Health Care Literacy Needs of Newly
Diagnosed Brain Cancer Patients (BCPs) From the
Perspectives of Both Patients Health Care
Providers (HCPs)
- Design/Methods
- Qualitative theme-saturation analysis (validated
in HCL) - 1 hr interviews by non-medical investigators
using templated questions discussion - Sequential blinded analyses until consensus
- To date, 3 of many planned focus groups
- are reported
Qual. Methods for Health Care Res, 06 Sewell
Scholarship POST article Student Scholarships
Presentations Nat. MLA 2 Florida Lib. Assoc.
Submissions American Academy of Neurology 2011
Annual Meeting National Library Assoc 11
38Focus GroupEvaluating HCL Needs in Brain Cancer
- IRB approved, interdisciplinary
- Audio-taped, transcribed
- 3600 Audience patient, caregiver, house-staff,
staff - Query their impressions of the impact of various
tools and info - Theme saturation ? pilot data
- Hypothesis-generating for more definitive research
39Qualitative Results
- Results HCPs BCPs were distinct in all
questions. - BCPs HCL needs changed throughout time were
unique from their perception of caregivers HCL
needs - Notable differences at diagnosis included
- BCPs HCL need to understand/improve symptoms,
provider/hospital quality immediate medical
events - Caregivers perceived HCL need to
understand/improve treatment long-term
prognosis - HCPs perceived HCL needs for BCPs included a
distinct set of immediate medical events
insufficiency in understanding /- improving
non-medical needs
40Outcomes for HCL Initiatives
- Current
- Unique interdisciplinary collaboration
- Presentations, grant applications
- Resource justification
- Librarian social worker positions, technology
- In development
- Add direct caregiver house-staff perspectives
- Add imbedded analysis of technology use
- Future
- New metrics for efficacy of health literacy
programs - Risk management, workflow, economic, quality care
Sewell Scholarship POST article Student
Scholarships Presentations Nat. MLA 2 Florida
Lib. Assoc. Submissions American Academy of
Neurology 2011 Annual Meeting National Library
Assoc 11
41- Resources for Health Care Literacy
- UF Health Science Center Webpage
- www.library.health.ufl.edu including Informed
Brain Cancer Patient site - Patient-Centered Research Outcomes Institutes
site - www.healthcare.gov
- University of Wisconsin, Madisons Comprehensive
Health Enhancement Support System (CHESS) - Computer-based system of integrated services
designed to help individuals cope with a health
crisis - There research has demonstrated an increased
quality of life in groups of cancer patients - http//chess.wisc.edu/chess/publications/archives_
prj.aspx - Dartmouth-Hitchkock Medical Centers Shared
Decision Making Center - http//www.dhmc.org
42Unmet Need AddressedAligning Healthcare Needs
Resources
- Increasing disparity between needs resources
- Inadequate data to justify staff, resources, etc
---- both - immediate and long-term
- HCL is under-utilized and potentially powerful
http//www.sacramentoexecutive.com/Cartoon6prescri
ption_dosage.jpg www.knockknock.biz/.../product_1
2056_l1.jpg REFS
43HCL Examples for Patients Caregivers
Not complete, dynamic, individualized, nor
specific
44Information Rx
- I am a patient___ a caregiver___ an
interested individual___ - I would like more information on
- Disease ______________________
- Risk factors____, diagnosis____, staging____,
treatment at diagnosis____, treatment at
recurrence____, monitoring____, prognosis____,
other____ - Being a patient and/or Caregiver
- Support____ Home care_ hospice care_ End of
life - Wellbeing
- Memory___ Personality___ Emotional changes___
Coping___ Talking to children or relative___
Changes in self-perception or how others perceive
you___ Other___ - Energy
- Fatigue___ Nutrition while receiving treatment
Changes in taste___ Changes in Bowel Habits___ - Therapy
- Specific medicines or treatments (uses,
risks/benefits, results______ Use of
alternative medicines___ - Comfort
- Quality of Life____ specific symptoms___
- Rehabilitation
- Exercise___ Home or Facility Rehab___ Other___
45Information Rx
- When seeking education or assistance for health
issues - I consider myself
- Beginner___ Somewhat skilled___ Very skilled___
- I consider it
- Not stressful___ Somewhat stressful___ Very
stressful___ - I would like assistance and/or education with
- Computer skills
- internet navigating, UF-HSC Library resources,
other_______ - Searching for
- clinical trials__ health information___
Shands-UF resources___ Resources (community,
state, USA)____ - I would like to be contacted in the future for
- YES/NO I am ok being contacted about updates
on______ - New services/programs at UFHSC Library or
UF-Shands Other____ - The best way to contact me is_____________
- I would like the following recourses/services
available in the future_____
46Resource Rx
- Todays date ______ Patients name is
______________ - Contact s are __The best time to be contacted
is ___ - The patient lives in __The patient lives alone or
with __ - Diagnosis is ___Date of diagnosis_____Past
medical __ - Please check those that may apply to your own
concerns questions - ___ 1) Coping with physical changes from illness,
surgery, treatment - ___ 2) Home Care, Medical Equipment needs,
Transitions Program, Hospice - ___ 3) Care Giver issues emotional support for
patient, family, friends - ___ 4) Financial assistance for treatment and/or
medications - ___ 5) Job/work related issues, FMLA, SSD,
insurance - ___ 6) Crisis intervention, grief and loss
concerns - ___ 7) Local lodging, transportation
- ___ 8) Decision making with regard to quality of
life your treatment goals - ___ 9) Emotional and/or spiritual support for
patient and/or family - ___ 10) Other __________________
47Outcomes for Info Rx Resource Rx
- Current
- Justification of staff
- Social workers, Librarians, grad student
researchers, staff - Quality safety data for UF-COM and Hospital
committees - Healthcare utilization and unmet needs
- Grant applications
- Future
- Assess adequacy of public health information
technology - Tool development for improving measuring
- Residency and staff education
- Funding
48Example of Interactive Education Module
- Navigating The Road of Treatment
Department of Neurosurgical Specialties Dr. Erin
Dunbar, M.D. University of Florida
49When/What New Treatment to Start
- General Science
- General Safety
- Goals/Wishes/Fears
- Logistics
- Strategy
- Order of Therapy
Relatively, equally likely to be safe or work
Oral, IV Outpatient, inpatient Cost/insurance Freq
uency Interested in a Trial? See next
slide Support (drivers) Where located, available
50Interested in a Trial?
- Trials Phases
- Phase 1 Safe?
- Phase 2 Work?
- Phase 3 Compare to existing therapies
- Trial Types
- Therapeutic
- Supportive, quality of life
- Outcome and risk factors
- Tissue analysis
51Toolsto Decide Treatment
- Exams
- Labs
- Goals/Wishes
- Symptoms
- Imaging
52What/When New Treatment to Stop
- Do you want it?
- Is it Safe?
- Is it getting the job done?
53What your MRI images tell us
Leaky Brain contrast in brain symptoms from
brain leakage
54What Your MRI Is Telling Us Only Shows the Broken
Blood Brain Barrier
Intact Blood Brain Barrier
Broken Blood Brain Barrier
Break is Non-specific Inflammation Tumor Infectio
n Stroke Other
Contrast Dye
55- Tumor
- Known Risks and Symptoms
- Treatment Potential Risks and Symptoms
- Confusion/Speech
- Blood clots
- Bleeding
- Lowered immune system
- Infection
- Fatigue
- Headache
- Seizure
- Loss of function and sensation
- Memory/personality
- Lower blood counts
- Infection
- Fatigue
- Nausea or constipation
- Specific organ toxicities
- Blood clots
- Bleeding
56Health Care Literacy Initiatives at UF
- Potential outcomes
- improved sharing of information
- legitimize the impact of health literacy programs
- resource justification for an immersed librarian
resources - new models of interdisciplinary collaboration
- novel use of the librarian in quality assurance,
quality control, risk management, workflow and
resource utilization, etc. - improved satisfaction and quality for all
involved - improved healthcare outcomes
57Health Care Literacy in YOUR AREA
- Hospital Websites Education Program
- Patient Staff Satisfaction Surveys
- Education Support Groups
- Creating Connections
- Nurses, administrators, providers, social
workers, - clergy, counselors, training programs, community
- vendors, advocacy groups..
- Pick a pilot project
- Have Fun!
- Build on each others Successes
58Current Future
- Creating Expanding Connections
- Are you using our tools?
- Can we use yours?
- Developing Services
- Scientifically Measuring Effects
- Best models?
- Outreach models
- How can we leverage?
- Feedback?
- Measure impact?
59Thank you for all you do!The End
Erin M. Dunbar, MD 352-273-9000 edunbar_at_neurosurge
ry.ufl.edu