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      How the stigma of low literacy can impair patient-professional spoken interactions and affect health: insights from a qualitative investigation

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          Abstract

          Background

          Low literacy is a significant problem across the developed world. A considerable body of research has reported associations between low literacy and less appropriate access to healthcare services, lower likelihood of self-managing health conditions well, and poorer health outcomes. There is a need to explore the previously neglected perspectives of people with low literacy to help explain how low literacy can lead to poor health, and to consider how to improve the ability of health services to meet their needs.

          Methods

          Two stage qualitative study. In-depth individual interviews followed by focus groups to confirm analysis and develop suggestions for service improvements. A purposive sample of 29 adults with English as their first language who had sought help with literacy was recruited from an Adult Learning Centre in the UK.

          Results

          Over and above the well-documented difficulties that people with low literacy can have with the written information and complex explanations and instructions they encounter as they use health services, the stigma of low literacy had significant negative implications for participants’ spoken interactions with healthcare professionals.

          Participants described various difficulties in consultations, some of which had impacted negatively on their broader healthcare experiences and abilities to self-manage health conditions. Some communication difficulties were apparently perpetuated or exacerbated because participants limited their conversational engagement and used a variety of strategies to cover up their low literacy that could send misleading signals to health professionals.

          Participants’ biographical narratives revealed that the ways in which they managed their low literacy in healthcare settings, as in other social contexts, stemmed from highly negative experiences with literacy-related stigma, usually from their schooldays onwards. They also suggest that literacy-related stigma can significantly undermine mental wellbeing by prompting self-exclusion from social participation and generating a persistent anxiety about revealing literacy difficulties.

          Conclusion

          Low-literacy-related stigma can seriously impair people’s spoken interactions with health professionals and their potential to benefit from health services. As policies increasingly emphasise the need for patients’ participation, services need to simplify the literacy requirements of service use and health professionals need to offer non-judgemental (universal) literacy-sensitive support to promote positive healthcare experiences and outcomes.

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          Most cited references17

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          The relationship of patient reading ability to self-reported health and use of health services.

          This study examined the relationship of functional health literacy to self-reported health and use of health services. Patients presenting to two large, urban public hospitals in Atlanta, Ga, and Torrance, Calif, were administered a health literacy test about their overall health and use of health care services during the 3 months preceding their visit. Patients with inadequate functional health literacy were more likely than patients with adequate literacy to report their health as poor. Number of years of school completed was less strongly associated with self-reported health. Literacy was not related to regular source of care or physician visits, but patients in Atlanta with inadequate literacy were more likely than patients with adequate literacy to report a hospitalization in the previous year. Low literacy is strongly associated with self-reported poor health and is more closely associated with self-reported health than number of years of school completed.
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            Inadequate literacy is a barrier to asthma knowledge and self-care.

            To determine the relationship of literacy to asthma knowledge and ability to use a metered-dose inhaler (MDI) among patients with asthma. Cross-sectional survey. Emergency department and asthma clinic at an urban public hospital. Convenience sample of 273 patients presenting to the emergency department for an asthma exacerbation and 210 patients presenting to a specialized asthma clinic for routine care. Measurement of literacy with the Rapid Estimate of Adult Literacy in Medicine, asthma knowledge (20 question oral test), and demonstration of MDI technique (six-item assessment). Only 27% of patients read at the high-school level, although two thirds reported being high-school graduates; 33% read at the seventh- to eighth-grade level, 27% at the fourth- to sixth-grade level, and 13% at or below the third-grade level. Mean asthma knowledge scores (+/-SD) were directly related to reading levels: 15.1+/-2.5, 13.9+/-2.5, 13.4+/-2.8, 11.9+/-2.5, respectively (p < 0.01). Patient reading level was the strongest predictor of asthma knowledge score in multivariate analysis. Poor MDI technique (< or =3 correct steps) was found in 89% of patients reading at less than the third-grade level compared with 48% of patients reading at the high-school level. In multivariate regression analyses, reading level was the strongest predictor of MDI technique. Inadequate literacy was common and strongly correlated with poorer knowledge of asthma and improper MDI use.
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              The causal pathways linking health literacy to health outcomes.

              To provide an evidence-based review of plausible causal pathways that could best explain well-established associations between limited health literacy and health outcomes. Through analysis of current findings in medical and public health literature on health literacy we derived a conceptual causal model. Health literacy should be viewed as both a patient and a system phenomenon. Three distinct points along a continuum of health care are suggested to be influenced by health literacy: (1) access and utilization of health care, (2) patient-provider relationship, and (3) self-care. The conceptual model organizes what has been learned to date and underscores promising areas of future inquiry and intervention.
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                Author and article information

                Journal
                BMC Health Serv Res
                BMC Health Serv Res
                BMC Health Services Research
                BioMed Central
                1472-6963
                2013
                16 August 2013
                : 13
                : 319
                Affiliations
                [1 ]NHS Tayside, Kings Cross, Clepington Road, Dundee, DD3 8EA, UK
                [2 ]University of Aberdeen, Health Services Research Unit, Foresterhill, Aberdeen, AB25 2ZD, UK
                [3 ]University of Stirling, Stirling, FK9 4LA, UK
                Article
                1472-6963-13-319
                10.1186/1472-6963-13-319
                3751726
                23958036
                c5899504-afe2-49da-bf51-4bc39d3e0f2a
                Copyright ©2013 Easton et al.; licensee BioMed Central Ltd.

                This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License ( http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.

                History
                : 10 January 2013
                : 15 August 2013
                Categories
                Research Article

                Health & Social care
                low literacy,patient-provider communication,patient-provider relationships,person-centred care,qualitative

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