Promoting Health Literacy
- Correspondence and reprints: Alexa T. McCray, PhD, National Library of Medicine, Bethesda, MD 20894.; e-mail: <mccray{at}nlm.nih.gov>
- Received 3 September 2004
- Accepted 15 November 2004
Abstract
This report reviews some of the extensive literature in health literacy, much of it focused on the intersection of low literacy and the understanding of basic health care information. Several articles describe methods for assessing health literacy as well as methods for assessing the readability of texts, although generally these latter have not been developed with health materials in mind. Other studies have looked more closely at the mismatch between patients' literacy levels and the readability of materials intended for use by those patients. A number of studies have investigated the phenomenon of literacy from the perspective of patients' interactions in the health care setting, the disenfranchisement of some patients because of their low literacy skills, the difficulty some patients have in navigating the health care system, the quality of the communication between doctors and their patients including the cultural overlay of such exchanges, and ultimately the effect of low literacy on health outcomes. Finally, the impact of new information technologies has been studied by a number of investigators. There remain many opportunities for conducting further research to gain a better understanding of the complex interactions between general literacy, health literacy, information technologies, and the existing health care infrastructure.
Footnotes
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An earlier version of this paper was given by the author as the Eileen Cunningham Lecture at Vanderbilt University in October 2003.
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↵* The 2003 National Assessment of Adult Literacy (NAAL), a follow-on to the 1992 survey, has been conducted, but the findings have not yet been released. (http://nces.ed.gov/naal/.)









