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Health Literacy

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How do these medical-based premises align with the standard-based school health ... such as how they eat, whether they exercise, and whether they get checkups. ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Health Literacy


1
Health Literacy
  • Health Literacy What is it?
  • The capacity of individuals to obtain, interpret,
    and understand basic health information and
    services and the competence to use such
    information and services in ways which enhance
    health. Joint Committee on National Health
    Education Standards (1995)
  • Desired outcome of the National Health Education
    Standards Project
  • NHES outline skills and knowledge needed to
    become health literate
  • The degree to which individuals have the capacity
    to obtain, process and understand basic health
    information and services needed to make
    appropriate health decisions Seldon et al., 2000
    used by the Institute of Medicine, 2004 and in
    Healthy People 2010, U.S. Department of Health
    and Human Services, 2000
  • Background The Need
  • Low health literacy is a wide spread problem,
    affecting more than 90 million adults in the
    United States (Kirsch, Jungeblut, Jenkins
    Kolstad, 1993).
  • Low health literacy results in patients
    inadequate engagement in, and benefit from,
    health care advances as well as medical errors.
  • Low health literacy is likely to be a major
    contributor of adverse health outcomes (AMA,
    1999 Baker, Gazmararian, Williams, Scott,
    Parker, Green, Ren, Peel, 2002 Baker, Parker,
    Williams, Clark, 1998).
  • Research has linked low or limited health
    literacy with such adverse outcomes as poorer
    self-management of chronic diseases, less healthy
    behaviors, higher rates of hospitalizations, and
    overall poorer health (Gazmararian, Baker,
    Williams, Parker, Scott, Green, Fehrenbach, Ren,
    Koplan, 1999 Schillinger, Grumbach, Piette,
    Wang, Osmond, Daher, Palacios, Sullivan,
    Bindman, 2002 Williams, Parker, Baker, Pitkin,
    Coates, Nurss, 1995).

2
Basic Premise NIH PAR 04-116 Understanding and
Promotion Health Literacy (RO1)Many factors
affect individuals ability to comprehend, and in
turn use or act on, health information and
communication.
  • Proficiency in reading, writing, listening,
    interpreting, oral communication, and visual
    analysis is necessary as the modern health system
    typically relies on a variety of interpersonal,
    textual, and electronic media to present health
    information.
  • Individuals and families both must be able to
  • Communicate with health professionals
  • Understand the health information in mass
    communication
  • Understand how to use health-related print,
    audiovisual, graphical and electronic materials
  • Understand basic health concepts (e.g., many
    health problems can be prevented or minimized)
    and vocabulary (e.g., about the body, diseases,
    medical treatments, etc.) and
  • Connect this health-related knowledge to health
    decision-making and action-taking.
  • Health literacy skills include
  • Gathering and comprehending health information
  • Speaking and sharing personal information about
    health history and symptoms
  • Acting on information by initiating appropriate
    follow-up visits and conveying understanding back
    to the information source
  • Making decisions about basic healthy behaviors,
    such as healthy eating and exercise
  • Engaging in self-care and chronic disease
    management

How do these medical-based premises align with
the standard-based school health education
program? How can the public health care system
and the education system support one another?
3
Vision for a Health-Literate AmericaInstitute of
Medicine, 2004
  • We believe a health-literate America would be a
    society in which
  • Everyone has the opportunity to improve their
    health literacy.
  • Everyone has the opportunity to use reliable,
    understandable information that could make a
    difference in their overall well-being, including
    everyday behaviors such as how they eat, whether
    they exercise, and whether they get checkups.
  • Health and science content would be basic parts
    of K_12 curricula.
  • People are able to accurately assess the
    credibility of health information presented by
    health advocate, commercial, and new media
    sources.
  • There is a monitoring and accountability for
    health literacy policies and practices.
  • Public health alerts, vital to the health of the
    nation, are presented in everyday terms so that
    people can take needed action.
  • The cultural contexts of diverse peoples,
    including those from various cultural groups and
    non-English-speaking peoples, are integrated in
    to all health information.
  • Health practitioners communicate clearly during
    all interactions with their patients, using
    everyday vocabulary.
  • There is ample time for discussions between
    patients and health care providers.
  • Patients feel free and comfortable to ask
    questions as part of their healing relationship.
  • Rights and responsibilities in relation to health
    and health care are presented or written in
    clear, everyday terms so that people can take
    needed action. P.13

4
Strategies for Health Literacy Instruction
Institute of Medicine, 2004
  • There is sound justification for embedding health
    literacy instruction into existing literacy
    instruction for children and adults.
  • Research shows that learners retain and apply
    information best in contexts similar to those in
    which they learned it Beretier, 1997 Mayer and
    Wittrock, 1996 Perkins, 1992.
  • Reading and writing skills should be taught in
    the context of texts and literacy purposes that
    readers will encounter in the real world.
  • Health texts (and/or articles, papers, etc.) and
    purposes for reading them make up one of those
    real-life literacy domains.
  • Embedding health literacy instruction can be done
    with the two types of literacy instruction needed
    to improve health literacy.
  • Basic print literacy instruction
  • Literacy instruction in text types common to the
    field of health literacy (e.g., prescriptions,
    recipes, instructions, etc.)
  • Science education provides a clear opportunity
    for implementation of health literacy education
    programs and content.
  • It is possible to evaluate basic literacy and
    functional print literacy, and it is important to
    be clear when conceptualizing and building valid
    assessments.
  • SCASS-HEAP was highlighted.
  • Future SCASS-HEAP PD and Resource Development
  • Should SCASS-HEAP focus on developing more
    assessment items that can be used to assess
    health literacy? Are there additional
    descriptors that need to be added to the
    framework that are specific to health literacy?
  • How can we build new assessments that incorporate
    or emphasize health literacy (e.g., Lexile
    reading levels, instructions for item writers
    that incorporate reading/writing rubrics, science
    integration, etc.)?

5
Accountability in School Health EducationHealth
Knowledge and Skills or Health Behavior
  • K-12 school health educators are denying the
    importance of their role in influencing youth
    behavior, ignoring the needs of students, and
    failing to address the expectations of parents
    and communities Gobernali, et al., 2005, p. 211.
  • Increasing health knowledge, skills, and
    attitudes is a fundamental purpose of schools,
    irrespective of whether measured health behaviors
    of health outcomes also improve as a consequence
    Kolbe, 2002, p. 6.
  • We maintain that classroom health educators are
    not denying their important role of primary
    prevention for public health, e.g., influencing
    students health behaviors. However, they have to
    contend with the real world of education reform
    that challenges them to teach to health education
    standards and formally assess student learning.
    Our premise is that health educators are
    contributing to our nations health as never
    before they are providing students with the
    health knowledge and health skills that are
    prerequisites for becoming health literate and
    using assessment tools to demonstrate
    effectiveness. In the school health educators
    world, accountability equates to improved student
    knowledge and skills. To expect them to be held
    accountable for students behavior is
    professional suicide. Benham-Deal Hudson, in
    press.

What is the purpose of classroom based health
education? Should the health education teacher be
held accountable for students health
behavior? Should the health education teacher be
held responsible for students health
behavior? How can the public health system and
the school health education system work together
to achieve health literacy?
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