Health literacy means more than just reading medical papers. It also means understanding pictures, listening to spoken instructions, reading medicine labels, and making good health choices. Recent studies show a few facts:
Low health literacy causes many problems. It leads to worse health, more hospital stays, more visits to the emergency room, and less use of preventive care. Medical offices need to make plans to help patients understand health information better and get more involved in their care.
Health literacy affects how often people use healthcare. Studies show people with low health literacy go less to regular doctor visits. They use emergency rooms more and stay longer in hospitals. One study of 489 older Medicare patients found that better health literacy means better health and fewer emergency and hospital visits. This is true even when considering knowledge about diseases or taking medicine as told.
People with low health literacy might wait too long before seeing a doctor. They may not understand instructions or find it hard to talk to doctors. This can cause diseases like diabetes or cancer to be found too late. Late detection means more urgent care and hospital use. This adds pressure on hospitals and costs more money.
Low health literacy is also linked to risky habits like smoking, drinking too much alcohol, and not exercising. These habits worsen health but are harder to fix if patients do not understand how to follow health advice.
Preventive services are tests and checks that stop illness or find it early. These include mammograms, vaccinations, and regular doctor checkups. People with low health literacy use these services less often. For example, women with low health literacy are less likely to get breast cancer screening. They also miss vaccines or advice to manage ongoing health problems. This can cause serious illness and emergency hospital visits.
The Healthy People 2030 program says healthcare groups must help all people understand health information. When systems and communication fit all literacy levels, patients have more regular care visits. This lowers preventable hospital stays and cuts healthcare costs.
People with low health literacy may miss preventive care because medical instructions and appointment scheduling are hard to understand. They might not know when screenings are needed or what follow-ups to attend.
Health literacy is connected to social factors like education, income, race, and language skills. Studies show non-white people, older adults, and people with less money often have low health literacy. These social factors make health care harder to get and understand:
Healthcare workers need to use simple language and understand cultural differences. This can help reduce differences in health by making information easier to get and improving patient participation in care.
Since many people have low health literacy, the American Medical Association (AMA) and Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) say healthcare providers should use universal precautions. These steps help all patients understand better:
Using these steps helps providers talk well with every patient. This leads to better choices about health and more use of preventive and routine care.
Technology, especially Artificial Intelligence (AI), can help fix health literacy problems and improve healthcare use. Medical office managers and IT staff can benefit from AI and automation.
Simbo AI is a company that uses AI to answer phones and help schedule appointments. Their system can answer calls, book visits, and give basic health details without human staff. This helps patients get information quickly and make appointments easily.
For patients with low health literacy, automated machines use clear and simple words. This helps explain instructions and reminders so patients understand better. It also helps them follow doctor visits and medicine instructions.
AI can send health information that fits a person’s reading skills, language, and background. AI tools can change materials, reminders, and directions to match the patient’s understanding.
Automated chatbots and virtual helpers can answer patient questions anytime about medicines, symptoms, or visits. This helps patients learn more about their health and keep up with care plans. It increases chances of regular doctor visits and preventive care.
Doctors and nurses sometimes find it hard to manage many patients and providers. AI can automate simple tasks like booking appointments, reminding about medicines, and follow-up calls. This keeps patients involved in care.
With automation, staff spend more time on patient care and less on paperwork. Regular follow-ups lower the risk of missed visits. This is important for people who don’t understand when to get care.
If used well, AI and automation can reduce health gaps caused by low health literacy. Simbo AI’s system can adjust to patient needs, like language preferences and simple instructions for those who need them.
Medical offices with many older or diverse patients may find these tools help communication, increase preventive care visits, and reduce unnecessary emergency or hospital stays.
Medical office leaders, owners, and IT managers have an important job shaping how health literacy affects healthcare in their clinics. Some ideas to use are:
By knowing about health literacy and using technology, healthcare providers can help patients make better choices, use more prevention services, reduce expensive emergency care, and improve overall health.
Knowing about health literacy and healthcare helps U.S. medical practices meet patient needs better, improve access, and lower avoidable healthcare costs.
Health literacy is the degree to which individuals can obtain, process, and understand basic health information and services to make informed health decisions.
Only 14% of the U.S. population has proficient health literacy, impacting their ability to make informed decisions about health, especially highlighted during the COVID-19 pandemic.
The office aims to reduce health disparities, educate healthcare providers, and attract diverse healthcare workers.
Personal health literacy is the capacity individuals have to obtain and understand needed health information and services.
Organizational health literacy is the responsibility of institutions to provide the public with accessible information and services for informed health decisions.
This initiative updated the definition of health literacy, emphasizing that organizations must promote health literacy to improve healthcare utilization and outcomes.
Improving health literacy can enhance the use of preventive services and routine healthcare visits, thereby potentially reducing hospitalization and medical expenses.
AI can be harnessed to enhance health literacy by providing personalized health information and improving access to health services.
Low health literacy contributes to healthcare disparities, making it difficult for underserved populations to access and understand health information.
Stakeholders can collaborate to promote awareness, create health education programs, and utilize technology to enhance the accessibility of health information.