Addressing Health Literacy at State Health Departments

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MINNESOTA DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH Addressing Health Literacy at State Health Departments Presented by: Genelle Lamont, MPH DHPE Fellow September 25, 2013

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Addressing Health Literacy at State Health Departments. September 25, 2013. Presented by: Genelle Lamont, MPH DHPE Fellow. Objectives. Describe health literacy within a public health context. Relay the importance of addressing health literacy in public health. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

Transcript of Addressing Health Literacy at State Health Departments

Page 1: Addressing Health Literacy at State Health Departments

MINNESOTA DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH

Addressing Health Literacy at State Health Departments

Presented by:Genelle Lamont, MPH

DHPE Fellow

September 25, 2013

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MINNESOTA DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH

Objectives

1. Describe health literacy within a public health context.

2. Relay the importance of addressing health literacy in public health.

3. List strategies for starting a health literacy initiative at a state department of health.

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MINNESOTA DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH

Health Literacy…

“is the degree to which individuals have the capacity to obtain, process, and understand basic information and services needed to make appropriate decisions regarding their health.”-National Academies of Sciences, Institute of Medicine (2004)

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MINNESOTA DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH

The Calgary Charter

Find Understand Evaluate Communicate

Fundamental: reading, writing & numeracy Scientific: science and technology Cultural: customs and cultural beliefsCivic: enabling citizens to become involved

USEUSEHealth Literacy Domains (Zarcadoolas, 2005)

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MINNESOTA DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH

Medicaid Letter

The law cited below [not included here] requires that all conditions of eligibility must be verified at each redetermination of eligibility unless the verification is pending from a third party and the recipient has cooperated in obtaining the verification. Since you have not provided the necessary verification or you have failed to cooperate in obtaining verification from a third party, your cash and/or medical assistance must be stopped.

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MINNESOTA DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH

Antibiotic Resistance Print Ad

Source: United Health Foundation (2003) as seen on page 47 of Zarcadoolas C; Pleasant AF; and Greer DS (Eds). Advancing Health Literacy: A Framework for Understanding and Action. Jossey-Boss Publications; San Francisco, CA: 2006.

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MINNESOTA DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH

…But what about examples that ARE health literate?

Contact: Don McCormick, Public Information Officer,Iowa Department of Public Health

www.idph.state.ia.us/PlainAndSimple/Default.aspx

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MINNESOTA DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH

Barriers to Health Literacy

1. Complexity of written health information in print/web.

2. Lack of health information in languages other than English and inadequate translations.

3. Lack of cultural appropriateness of health information.

4. Inaccuracy or incompleteness of information in mass media.

5. Low-level reading abilities, especially among undereducated, elderly and some segments of ethnic minority populations.

6. Lack of empowering content that targets behavior change as well as direct information (social marketing strategies).

Source: Zarcadoolas, Pleasant and Greer (2006)

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MINNESOTA DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH

U.S. Adult Health Literacy

88% of American adults do not have proficient health literacy skillsneeded to make important individual and family health choices.

Source: National Center for Education Statistics (2006). The Health Literacy of America’s Adults: Results from the 2003 National AssessmentOf Adult Literacy. Washington, DC: U.S. Department of Education.

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MINNESOTA DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH

Risk Factors for Low Health Literacy

• Older adults (65+ years)

• Limited English Proficiency (LEP)

• Socioeconomically disadvantaged• Lower educational attainment• Lower income level• Higher percent minorities• Medicare/Medicaid recipients or uninsured

• Chronic and severe health conditions

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MINNESOTA DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH

Health Literacy: A Social Determinant of Health

• “Adults with limited health literacy have less knowledge of disease management, report poorer health status, and are less likely to seek preventative care.” (IOM, 2004)

• “Low health literacy costs the U.S. healthcare industry $73 billion per year in misdirected or misunderstood healthcare services (Vernon, 2009; Friedland, 1998; Howard, 2005)

• Public health has ethical and legal obligation to promote health literacy (Gazmararian et al. 2005)

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MINNESOTA DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH

2013 CHP Health Literacy Workshop

Purpose: Create a public health workforce at MDH fluent in health literacy principles and best practices.

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MINNESOTA DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH

Methodology

• Conducted comprehensive literature review• Developed workshop learning objectives and content• Arranged guest speakers, facilitators and panelists• Arranged workshop venue and catering service• Advertisements and invitations sent via MDH

Intranet and MS Outlook Calendars • Assessed participant learning needs for break-out

group activity: CDC Training Module and Simply Put Checklist

• Created Participant Workshop and Resources Packet

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MINNESOTA DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH

Resources

Participants received•Welcome letter•Agenda•Learning objectives•Speaker bios•Presentation slides•Directory of resources •MDH Communication policies/resources•Panel questions•Copies of pre-workshop assignment

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MINNESOTA DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH

Agenda

• Health literacy overview• Using health behavior theory to target, design,

and evaluate health messages • Implementing health literacy in a state public

health department • Video Screening: Say It Visually! • Break-out group activity• Panel Discussion: communicating with a diverse

audience • Wrap-up

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MINNESOTA DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH

Evaluation Results (51 of 85 attendees)

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MINNESOTA DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH

Lessons Learned

1. Health literacy curriculum for health departments needs to include application of health literacy and numeracy principles and best practices.

2. Curriculum should also include related topics such as health equity and SDH, health behavior and marketing models, risk communication, and cultural competency.

3. Emphasize data collection on target audience, including demographic data, focus groups and work on previous programs.

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MINNESOTA DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH

Lessons Learned (Contin…)

4. Utilizing internal and external resources (e.g. graphic designer, marketing consultants, website developer, communications department and community partners.5. Use of education design specialists, to apply adult learning theory to the curriculum.6. Evaluate curriculum.

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MINNESOTA DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH

What State Health Departments Can Do

1. Identify leadership and staff with interest2. Become local experts in health literacy 3. Build and strengthen relationships with internal

and external partners4. Conduct an agency health literacy assessment 5. Create an agency health literacy plan6. Identify health literacy resources and guides for

staff7. Provide opportunities for staff to be trained in

health literacy principals and best practices8. Build health literacy into staff competencies and

performance measures9. Evaluation

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MINNESOTA DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH

Acknowledgements

Directors of Health Promotion & Education•Steve Owens, Director of Health Equity•Karen Thompkins, Internship & Fellowship Manager•Liz Traore, Evaluation & Epidemiology Manager•Cheryl Welbeck, Executive AssistantMinnesota Department of Health•Mary Manning, Promotion & Chronic Disease (HPCD) Director•Jose Gonzalez, Office of Minority & Multicultural Health (OMMH) Director•Jim Peacock, Epidemiologist Senior Heart Disease & Stroke PreventionCenter for Health Promotion Leadership•Don Bishop, Director•Charity Kreider, Oral Health Program Coordinator•Mark Kinde, Injury & Violence Prevention Supervisor•Stan Shanedling, Heart Disease & Stroke Prevention Supervisor•Gretchen Taylor, Diabetes Program Supervisor•Merry Jo Thoele, Oral Health Program Supervisor

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MINNESOTA DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH

Questions

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MINNESOTA DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH

Genelle [email protected]@umn.edu

Don [email protected]

Charity [email protected]

www.health.state.mn.us/divs/hpcd/chp/