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Jürgen M. Pelikan, Christina Dietscher, Jakob Lorenc

Further Developing concept and tools of the Health Literate Health Care Organization using HPH, HLS-EU and quality management methodology . Jürgen M. Pelikan, Christina Dietscher, Jakob Lorenc Ludwig Boltzmann Institut Health Promotion Research,

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Jürgen M. Pelikan, Christina Dietscher, Jakob Lorenc

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  1. Further Developing concept and tools of the Health Literate Health Care Organization using HPH, HLS-EU and quality management methodology Jürgen M. Pelikan, Christina Dietscher, Jakob Lorenc Ludwig Boltzmann Institut Health Promotion Research, WHO-CC Health Promotion in Hospitals and Health Care

  2. Like literacy, health literacy is a relational concept Source: Parker, 2009 Skills/Abilities X Demands/Complexity = Health Literacy Health Literacy Equation: Source: Brach 2013 Health Literacy = f (Personal Skills/Abilities, Situational Demands/Complexity) Source: Pelikan 2013 (in tradition of Kurt Lewin)

  3. Disease prevention Health Care Health promotion How can health literacy be understood? – 4 elements of a compre-hensive definition used for the HLS-EU survey (Sorensen et al 2012) A resource for decisions of relevance to health Knowledge(on health / disease) To … Healthliteracy Understand Appraise Access Apply Motives (on health / disease) Competences(healthknolwedgemanagement) Health-related information (Source: Sorensen et al. 2012) Find / access: in data sources or by asking lays / experts Understand: texts / spoken language / pictures, tables, graphs Appraise: quality of information / of information source Apply: in own context / situation

  4. 2.1 Health Literacy as a Comprehensive Concept – Integrated Model and Definition of Health Literacy for the HLS-EU Study (Sorensen et al. 2012) “Health literacy is linked to literacy and encompasses people’s knowledge, motivation and competences to access, understand, appraise, and applyhealth information in order to make judgments and take decisions in everyday life concerning healthcare, disease prevention and health promotion to maintain or improve quality of life during the life course.”

  5. Low Health Literacy Levels are considerable & vary by Country!Percentage Distributions of Comprehensive HL Levels, for Countries and Total Sample (HLS-EU 2012) AT [N=996] BG [N=955] DE (NRW) [N=1041] EL[N=998] ES[N=981] IE[N=972] NL[N=993] PL[N=946] TOTAL [N=7883]

  6. Examples for strengthening health literacy-friendly settings

  7. Why is health literacy of patients important within the health care system? In the health care system health is restored by co-production (not by „compliance“!) of patients and health professionals, based on partnership in diagnosis and therapy by • Shared Decision Making • Collaboration in actions Requirements for co-production are • Sufficient competence (i.e. health literacy of patients) for decision-making & ability to cooperate These requirements have to be guaranteed by representatives of the health care system by • Enablement, empowerment & participationof patients This is necessary • for normativereasons (patient rights & patients expectations etc.), • for practical reasons, since co-production serves the evidence-basedquality of health care (effectiveness, efficacy & sustainability). • Better suitable entry to the professional health care system • Better collaboration of patients regarding diagnosis & therapy • Better diagnosis • Better compliance in therapy • Less medical errors • Less clinical costs

  8. Health literacy is important in different stages of a patient´s career • For healthy living: appraisal and taking into account of health risks & health resources continuously in everyday life • For entry to sick role: observation & appraisal of symptoms of disease • In sick role: Decision on self care/ use of the professional health care system • For entry to patient role: Decision to use of specific institutions of health care system (navigating the system) • In acute patient role: Description of symptoms and own life situation (& ability to ask relevant questions) during anamnesis, medical round, exit interview • In acute patient role : Cooperation in diagnostic tests • In acute patient role : Cooperation in therapy within and outside the health care system (shared decision making; compliance) • For role of chronic patient: self-management capacity to live a healthy life with a chronic condition

  9. How can health literacy be integrated into health care and what specific difference does it make? Health literacy emphasizes the relevance and conditions of information & communication & decisions of all involved parties for the processes & results of health care • Concerning Health Care HL is • a developable & measurable, individual & organizational resource, which is an input as well as an output of processes & results in health care with a strong link to the concepts of shared decision making & self-care-management. • Concerning Quality HL is • A specific measurable quality of individuals and systems with a strong link to the concepts of effectiveness and efficacy resp. of user-/patient-orientation and employee-orientation • Concerning Health Promotion (and Public Health) HL is • A measurable core concept of HP applicable to individuals & settings with a strong link to other core concept of HP like empowerment (enablement) & participation, social determinants of health

  10. A first proposal for a whole-systems HL approach

  11. The concept of a health literate health care organizations „A health literate organization makes it easier for people to navigate, understand, and use information and services to take care of their health.” (Brach et al. 2012)

  12. Ten attributes of health literate healthcare organizations (and systems) (Brach et al. 2012): A HL organization … • Has leadership that makes HL integral to its mission, structure, and operations • Integrates HL into planning, evaluation, patient safety, quality improvement • Prepares the workforce to be HL and monitors progress • Includes populations served in the design, implementation, and evaluation of health information and services • Meets the needs of populations with a range of HL skills & avoids stigmatization • Uses HL strategies in interpersonal communications and confirms understandingat all points of contact • Provides easy access to health information and services & navigation assistance • Designs / distributes print, audiovisual, social media content that is easy to understandandact on • Addresses HL in high-risk situations, including care transitions and communications about medicines • Communicates clearly what health plans cover and what individuals will have to pay for services Specific to HL Relating to specific HP principles Change / quality / risk management

  13. The current HLO approach – yes, but … • Inductively developed approach without a clear theoretical background • Focused mainly on outcomes of clinical care with potential to expand the HLO impact by also addressing future decisions in relation to healthcare, self management and health-related choices in daily life • Focused on patients only • Insufficiently connected to other healthcare reform approaches such as quality, Health Promoting Hospitals • Strongly driven by US healthcare context – legal and financial incentives such as capitation-based healthcare financing not automatically applicable to other contexts  Need for further development

  14. Learning from quality • Clear differentiation between structures, processes and outcomes needed • important for defining indicators, supporting measurement and continuous further development • Build capacities to support CQI of HLO • Focus on staff not only as service providers but as target group themselves • Development of comparable indicators / standards to support learning and exchange across organizations  Benchmarking

  15. Learning from Health Promoting Hospitals and other health promotion settings • In addition to focusing on cure and care, include also: • Living in the hospital • Future disease prevention • Future health promotion •  not only compensate low health literacy but actually empower for better health literacy • Expand target groups from patients to also • Staff • Community • Adapt concept to local healthcare system and strategies – establish conceptual links to liaise with potential allies

  16. Our proposal for a comprehensive whole-sale (health promoting) HLO concept

  17. The ISQUA process for standard development • Establishing need for new standards, priorities • Relationships with other standards considered • Standards development plan • Standards based on research, guidelines, technical input • Involvement of interested parties in development process • Clear scope and purpose of standards • Clear standards framework • Clear wording of standards • Testing/Piloting of standards • Approval of standards by standards setting body • Information and education to users and assessors • Timeframes, transitional arrangements for implementation • Satisfaction with standards monitored, data evaluated

  18. Further information on health literacy concepts at this conference • Plenary 2 (Thursday, 09.00-10.30): Health literacy – an emerging concept for more patient-oriented healthcare • Rima Rudd (Harvard): Health Literacy – an Emerging Concept for More Patient-Oriented Healthcare • Rosa Suñer (HL working group, HPH Catalunya): Making healthcare organizations more healthy – Literacy settings for patients • Hans Kluge (WHO-Euro): The contribution of health literacy to patient safety • Session O1.1 (Thursday, 11.00-12.30): Developing health literate healthcare systems and organizations • Further Developing concept and tools of the Health Literate Health Care Organization using HPH, HLS-EU and quality management methodology? (Pelikan, Dietscher, Lorenc) • Health Literacy, Chronic Illness, and Use of Primary, Secondary and Tertiary Healthcare - Making the Case for Health Literate Organizations (Levin-Zamir, Baron-Epel, Elhayany) • A Path to becoming a Health Literate Organization: Lessons Learned from the Experience of a Public Health Authority in Canada (Massé, Lemieux) • Health Literacy as a system strategy in Emilia-Romagna (Gazzotti, Ricco, Chiarenza, Ruozi)

  19. References & Resources Brach, C., Keller, D., Hernandes, LM., Baur, C., Parker, R., Dreyer, B., Schyve, P., Lemerise, AJ., Schillinger, D. (2012): Attributes of Health Literate Organization, Discussion Paper, Institute of Medicine of the national academies. http://www.iom.edu/~/media/Files/Perspectives-Files/2012/Discussion-Papers/BPH_HLit_Attributes.pdf Brach, C. (2013): Becoming a Health Literate Organization: Tools for Community Health Centers. Presentation 3.April 2013 at the Center for Delivery, Organization and Markets. DeWalt, D.A., Callahan, L.F., Hawk, V.H., Broucksou, K.A., Hink, A., Rudd, R. & Brach, C. (2010). Health Literacy Universal Precautions Toolkit. (Prepared by North Carolina Network Consortium, The Cecil G. Sheps Center for Health Services Research, The University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, under Contract No. HHSA290200710014.) AHRQ Publication No. 10-0046-EF) Rockville, MD: Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality. Kickbusch,I., Maag, D. (2008): HealthLiteracy. In: Heggenhougen,H.K., Quah,S.R. (Eds.), International Encyclopediaof Public Health, Vol. 3. (pp.204-211). San Diego: Academic Press. Kickbusch I, Pelikan J M, Apfel F, Tsouros A D (Eds.) (2013): Health literacy. The solid facts. Copenhagen: Copenhagen: World Health Organization – Regional Office for Europe. http://www.euro.who.int/__data/assets/pdf_file/0008/190655/e96854.pdf Levin-Zamir, D, Peterburg Y. (2001): Health literacy in health systems – perspectives on patient self-management Health Promotion International,16;1:87-94. Nutbeam,D. (2000): Health literacy as a public health goal: a challenge for contemporary health education and communication strategies into the 21st century. Health Promotion International, 15 (3), 259-267. Nutbeam,D. (2008): The evolving concept of health literacy. Social Science & Medicine, 67 (12), 2072-2078. Parker, R. in World Health Communication Association (2009): Health Literacy, Part 1 „The Basics“. WHCA Action Guide. Pelikan,J.M., Dietscher,C., Schmied,H. (2013): Health Promotion for NCDs in andby Hospitals: A HealthPromoting Hospital Perspective. In: McQueen,D. (Ed.), Global Handbook on NoncommunicableDiseasesandHealth Promotion (pp.441-460). New York, Heidelberg, Dordrecht, London: Springer. Pleasant, A. & Kuruvilla, S. (2008): A tale of two literacies: public health and clinical approaches to health literacy. Health Promot. Int. 23(2) 152-159. Rudd,R. (2005): Navigating Hospitals: LiteracyBarriers.LiteracyHarvest Rudd, R.E. & Anderson, J.E. (2006).The Health Literacy Environment of Hospitals and Health Centers – Partners for Action: Making your healthcare facility literacy-friendly. National Center for the Study of Adult Learning and Literacy and the Health and Adult Literacy and Learning Initiative, Harvard University School of Public Health. Sorensen,K., Broucke,S., Fullam,J., Doyle,G., Pelikan,J., Slonska,Z., Brand,H., (HLS-EU) Consortium (2012): Health literacyandpublichealth: A systematicreviewandintegrationofdefinitionsandmodels. BMC Public Health, 12 (80). WHO (1986): Ottawa Charter forHealth Promotion. In World HealthOrganization (Ed.), Geneva: WHO. WHO (1998): Healthpromotionglossary. Geneva: WHO

  20. Thank you for your attention! Jürgen M. Pelikan juergen.pelikan@lbihpr.lbg.ac.at Christina Dietscher christina.dietscher@lbihpr.lbg.ac.at

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