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Erschienen in: Journal of General Internal Medicine 11/2007

01.11.2007 | Original Article

Limited Health Literacy is a Barrier to Medication Reconciliation in Ambulatory Care

verfasst von: Stephen D. Persell, MD, MPH, Chandra Y. Osborn, PhD, Robert Richard, MD, Silvia Skripkauskas, BA, Michael S. Wolf, PhD, MPH

Erschienen in: Journal of General Internal Medicine | Ausgabe 11/2007

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Abstract

Background

Limited health literacy may influence patients’ ability to identify medications taken; a serious concern for ambulatory safety and quality.

Objective

To assess the relationship between health literacy, patient recall of antihypertensive medications, and reconciliation between patient self-report and the medical record.

Design

In-person interviews, literacy assessment, medical records abstraction.

Participants

Adults with hypertension at three community health centers.

Measurement

We measured health literacy using the short-form Test of Functional Health Literacy in Adults. Patients were asked about the medications they took for blood pressure. Their responses were compared with the medical record.

Results

Of 119 participants, 37 (31%) had inadequate health literacy. Patients with inadequate health literacy were less able to name any of their antihypertensive medications compared to those with adequate health literacy (40.5% vs 68.3%, p = 0.005). After adjusting for age and income, this difference remained (adjusted odds ratio [OR] = 2.9, 95% confidence interval [95%CI] = 1.3–6.7). Agreement between patient reported medications and the medical record was low: 64.9% of patients with inadequate and 37.8% with adequate literacy had no medications common to both lists.

Conclusions

Limited health literacy was associated with a greater number of unreconciled medications. Future studies should investigate how this may impact safety and hypertension control.
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Metadaten
Titel
Limited Health Literacy is a Barrier to Medication Reconciliation in Ambulatory Care
verfasst von
Stephen D. Persell, MD, MPH
Chandra Y. Osborn, PhD
Robert Richard, MD
Silvia Skripkauskas, BA
Michael S. Wolf, PhD, MPH
Publikationsdatum
01.11.2007
Verlag
Springer-Verlag
Erschienen in
Journal of General Internal Medicine / Ausgabe 11/2007
Print ISSN: 0884-8734
Elektronische ISSN: 1525-1497
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1007/s11606-007-0334-x

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