Hi Everyone, we'll be kicking off our annual health literacy blog series on Engaging the Patient. Watch for a new article every weekday in October. This year the focus is on the intersection of health literacy and shared decision making. We have a lot of great people contributing: like Peter Ubel, Corey Siegel, and Jan Prochaska. We'll also have a mini-series on health literacy and shared decision making around palliative care, hospice care, and end of life directives. I'll post links to articles here, but you're also welcome to subscribe to the blog, and then you'll get notifications every time a new article posts. Please also participate. Comments, discussions are all welcome.
Here's the info: http://engagingthepatient.com/celebrating-health-literacy-month/
Thanks!
Geri Lynn Baumblatt
Comments
The first blog article is up: http://tinyurl.com/9f8s93t
Lots more to come this week.
Great article on how cost of treatment options aren't clear to docs or patients when trying to make decisions about care: http://tinyurl.com/92q2v4r
Full article here: http://tinyurl.com/9ueh8h6
Please see recent posting Shared Decision Making—The Patient's Perspective which includes a brief video for patients from the Informed Medical Decision Foundation.The Foundation's website offers a wealth of information, tools, and resources, including videos of patients and providers discussing their experiences with shared decision making. I hope you find the info useful. Mary
Using the Transtheoretical Model to Promote Health Literacy and Shared Decision-Making
The passage of the Affordable Care Act and emergence of Patient Centered Medical Homes and Accountable Care Organizations has highlighted the need for expanding the patient role in treatment decisions, health care, and chronic care disease management through informed choice and shared decision-making. But this is a movement that has been steadily building for several years.
Read the full article here: http://tinyurl.com/9j2wq3a
Great article today on the challenges of finding the right voice and tone for an audience when helping patients make decisions or change health behaviors: http://engagingthepatient.com/2012/10/09/us-versus-them/
We live in an age of patient empowerment. Medical students are now routinely taught that the “right choice” often depends on patient preferences—on how an individual patient weighs the pros and cons of her treatment alternatives. That means medical decisions depend, more than ever, on good communication. Physicians need to help patients understand their choices so that they can partner with their patients in discovering the best alternatives, ones personalized to fit each patient’s individual preferences.
But helping patients understand their treatment choices is often no simple matter.
Read the article here: http://engagingthepatient.com/2012/10/08/shared-decision-making-requires-good-communication/
"There's an urgent need for research & development of shared decision making tools to meet the needs of people w/ limited literacy"
Read the article at: http://tinyurl.com/8joz8sc
Holly Witteman writes:
My first week at my new job at a French-speaking university in a city of 95% francophones, I learned a useful new expression: vouloir le beurre, et l’argent du beurre. This translates literally as, ‘to want the butter, and the butter money.’ It’s the equivalent of wanting to have your cake, and eat it, too, but with a more explicit focus on dairy fat. (It is a French expression, after all.)
This idiom is especially useful to me because it succinctly describes what is at the heart of my research: how to help people deal with tradeoffs.
Read the full article here: http://tinyurl.com/8jubfjf
Lots of great articles by Steven Kussin, Corey Siegel, Andrew Jager & Matt Wynia, Peter Ubel, Diana Dilger, Joanne Schwartzberg, Holly Witteman, Catch up on any you haven't read yet here: http://tinyurl.com/8wuvc22 #SDM
This week on the health literacy blog series all the articles will be about health literacy as it relates to things like palliative care and advanced directives.
Here's today's article: Conversations Worth Having
http://tinyurl.com/9u8ql7g
Next up, Diane Meier and Alexandra Drane.
Oh how I have been waiting for this topic to make its way to the Health Literacy forum (and if I've missed it previously, my bad).
I first realized how little I know (and understand )about options at life's end whilst lurking on the hospice and palliative medicine tweetchat (#hpm, Wednesday 9pmE)There, impassioned pleas from the healthcare professionals dedicated to a dignified end of life: 'if only people talked about it, so much grief could be avoided.' Their other lament: 'pallitive care is misunderstood. (I'm sure the amazing Diane Maier was one of the participants).'
From those chats Iearned it wasn't just me - a non health care professional - who found it hard to talk about, and were mis or under-informed about palliative and hospice care: It's not a comfortable topic even with healthcare professionals.
And so I began my own journey of discovery... blogged about it and include the range of super extremely helpful resources as (often) provided by the #hpm-ers and then the other tweetchat's devoted to life's end: Death with Dignity (#DWDchat) and End of Life Chat (#EOLchat)
My blog's www.BestEndings.com and through my search and research have learned about the PATH approach (Palliative and Theraputic Harmonization) and the Dignity Model - both huge patient centered, speak in plain language approaches to end of life .
I now have a much better understanding when when I would and wouldn't want, for example , artificial nutrition, breathing machine, CPR; how decisions can/should be different for the hale and healthy, and the frail elderly. Waaaay more than just a DNR.
and much to my delight: BestEndings is going to be incoporated into several hospitals' EHRs
Yay! the conversations happening all over the digital universe!
Enthusiastically and appreciatively yours,
Kathy Kastner
Today, MacArthur Genius Award Winner Diane Meier talks about palliative care and Transforming the Care of Serious Illness: Transforming the Care of Serious Illness: http://tinyurl.com/c48ank8
"Here’s a sobering statistic: 70% of people want to die at home, yet only 30% do." Read the full article here: http://tinyurl.com/cmjskgx
Jim Merlino on why Communications Training for Physicians is Key to a better Patient & Physician Experience: http://tinyurl.com/9t3ejdu
Dr. Kirsner asked me about my grandmother. “I remember your grandmother,” he said. “She was in a clinical trial we had using steroids for Crohn’s disease”. Everybody remembered Dr. Kirsner, but could Dr. Kirsner really remember a patient from 35 years ago? You bet he did. And he remembered so many other patients too. http://tinyurl.com/8wjzdcf
Is there room in a forum on shared decision making and patient communication for a father and son who never acknowledged their diagnosis? I hope so for a couple of reasons: http://tinyurl.com/9qylpnc
My husband woke me up at 2 AM on Monday morning for severe right shoulder pain, nausea and light-headedness. I drove him to the emergency room. Our initial encounter with the triage nurse was not very helpful. I tried to respond to her questions but she interrupted me saying the patient should answer her questions. He could hardly talk due to the pain and nausea. Finally she told us that he needs to be evaluated by the doctor and directed us to a door at the end of the hallway.
http://tinyurl.com/bsm5sup
Every day for the past 6.5 years, I’ve worked with a team of great people to try to reach journalists and the public they serve to try to improve the public dialogue in the U.S. about health care.
Even a casual observer should be able to see the connection with health literacy concerns in what we do. If the tsunami of stories that wash over the American public every day about claims for treatments, tests, products and procedures are not presented in a clear, understandable way with accuracy, balance and completeness, people will not be able to use that information.
Read the full article here: http://tinyurl.com/8eyd5bp
If you missed any of this year's great articles, the full list of links is here: http://tinyurl.com/bjgtlmn
If anyone is interested in participating next year, I'm not sure what the theme will be, but feel free to shoot me an email and I'll put you on the contact list for 2013.
Thanks! Geri: geri@emmisolutions.com
https://www.naturalnews.com/2019-02-26-vaccine-industry-turned-the-measles-into-a-national-emergency.html