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Help
With America's Health Care Crisis...Teach Someone to
Read!
Are you sometimes confused
by written medical instructions? Now, imagine what it
would be like if you were sick, scared and had only
third grade reading skills. Your doctor tells you, "You've
got to follow these instructions exactly, or you could
die."
About 200 recent studies have shown
the reading difficulty of most health related materials
FAR exceeds the average reading abilities of the American
adult. One of the biggest silent health problems today
is the gap between health materials and reading skills.
In the United States, the average reading
level is eighth grade. In 1992, the Educational Testing
Service determined that half U.S. adults read at between
first and eight grade level. That is about 148 million
people. It gets worse. One quarter of Americans read
BELOW FOURTH GRADE level, meaning 74 million people
would struggle with even the simplest, most well written
health materials.
Does it matter? Do you remember the
anthrax scare, when someone was putting deadly white
powder into our mail system?
During that terrorist scare, the U.S.
post office mailed millions of post cards to Americans.
The post cards told people how to protect themselves
from the deadly infection. They gave instructions on
how to handle and report suspicious mail. These post
cards were written at between ninth and eleventh grade
reading level.
More than half the people who got that
mailing could not read it well enough to protect themselves
and others. Does it matter? Do 148 million people matter?
Will it matter the next time the terrorists strike?
Do you remember the mailing the Surgeon
General sent out explaining how to avoid contracting
HIV? He made every effort to see that it was written
in clear, simple language. He got criticism for just
how plain talking it was in places. A later evaluation
of that document showed that it was written at between
seventh and ninth grade level. Half the people receiving
it read at a level BELOW what was required to read it.
No wonder the infection keeps spreading.
Think about it. For millions of people,
the problem is not just the tiny print on prescription
bottles. The problem is the words themselves. What does
"take on an empty stomach" mean exactly? When
should you "take four times a day"? Perhaps
your doctor explained to you at the office. Do you remember
what the doctor said a week later?
Have you ever read the instructions
for testing and assessing blood sugar levels? Have you
ever tried to fill out a Medicare form? Do you struggle
with letters from your health insurance provider?
Only 45% of asthmatics with literacy
problems knew that they should stay away from things
they are allergic to even if they WERE taking asthma
medication. 89% of the people reading at high school
level were clear about the same information. It's not
a matter of intelligence. It's a matter of a missing
skill which well-educated health providers presume is
present in their readers when they sit down to write.
There are two parts to the problem:
the writer and the reader. Recently, the public health
community has begun efforts to raise awareness. They
are alerting the medical providers to the impact of
health literacy issues. Some fledgling efforts are underway
to provide clearer, simpler materials for the public.
People are finding alternatives to reading for presenting
the same information.
There is a long way to go. Sign up now
with your local literacy program as a volunteer.
Drop in on your elderly neighbor and
help her learn to read the specialized health material
so critical in her life. (You may want to ask her about
her life first, to save embarrassment when you learn
you're talking to a retired English teacher). Start
with all those ridiculously obscure materials her doctor
sent home with her about glaucoma. You can go on to
that Medicare form she needs to send in tomorrow.
Do you want to know what eighth grade
reading level is? You just read 700 words of it. 74
million Americans reading at below fourth grade level
could have found it too hard for them to understand.
1howto.com
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