A low-literacy medication education tool for safety-net hospital patients

Kristina M Cordasco, Steven M Asch, Doug S Bell, Jeffrey J Guterman, Sandra Gross-Schulman, Lois Ramer, Uri Elkayam, Idalid Franco, Cianna L Leatherwood, Carol M Mangione, Kristina M Cordasco, Steven M Asch, Doug S Bell, Jeffrey J Guterman, Sandra Gross-Schulman, Lois Ramer, Uri Elkayam, Idalid Franco, Cianna L Leatherwood, Carol M Mangione

Abstract

Background: To improve medication adherence in cardiac patients, in partnership with a safety-net provider, this research team developed and evaluated a low-literacy medication education tool.

Methods: Using principles of community-based participatory research, the team developed a prototype of a low-literacy hospital discharge medication education tool, customizable for each patient, featuring instruction-specific icons and pictures of pills. In 2007, a randomized controlled clinical trial was performed, testing the tool's effect on posthospitalization self-reported medication adherence and knowledge, 2 weeks postdischarge in English- and Spanish-speaking safety-net inpatients. To validate the self-report measure, 4 weeks postdischarge, investigators collected self-reports of the number of pills remaining for each medication in a subsample of participants. Nurses rated tool acceptability.

Results: Among the 166/210 eligible participants (79%) completing the Week-2 interview, self-reported medication adherence was 70% (95% CI=62%, 79%) in intervention participants and 78% (95% CI=72%, 84%) in controls (p=0.13). Among the 85 participants (31%) completing the Week-4 interview, self-reported pill counts indicated high adherence (greater than 90%) and did not differ between study arms. Self-reported adherence was correlated with self-reported pill count in intervention participants (R=0.5, p=0.004) but not in controls (R=0.07, p=0.65). There were no differences by study arm in medication knowledge. The nurses rated the tool as highly acceptable.

Conclusions: Although the evaluation did not demonstrate the tool to have any effect on self-reported medication adherence, patients who received the schedule self-reported their medication adherence more accurately, perhaps indicating improved understanding of their medication regimen and awareness of non-adherence.

Trial registration: ClinicalTrials.gov NCT00408733.

Source: PubMed

3
Subscribe