Area Health
Education Center combats health illiteracy
Upcoming
program trains medical professionals to better
communicate with patients
October 13, 2009
By Colleen Kiphart
Earlier this
year, a study showed that 85 percent of parents
misread children’s over-the-counter medicines,
believing they could be given to children
younger than two, despite labels warning against
it. The researchers suggest that medical
professionals and drug companies often use
unclear language and overestimate patients’
knowledge of medical issues.
To help health
care pros better communicate with patients and
anticipate their concerns, the local Area Health
Education Center at the Ohio University Heritage College
of Osteopathic Medicine (OU-HCOM), will offer a
training program.
The program,
“Health Literacy: Helping Patients Understand,”
will take place Thursday, October 22, from 9
a.m. to 3:30 p.m. in the Ohio University Baker
University Center Ballroom in Athens, Ohio.
“We are
empowering individuals to take ownership of
their health care,” says Kathy Trace, B.S.N.,
director of both AHEC and OU-HCOM’s Community
Health Programs. “Patients need to know what to
ask, and doctors need to remember that their
patients haven’t been to medical school.”
Ellen Peterson,
B.S.N., continuing education coordinator at AHEC,
emphasized that the program will provide
hands-on skills and techniques that
professionals can use to better connect with
their patients, which in the end means better
health care.
The goal,
Peterson said, is to remind health care
professionals that patients usually don’t
understand medical terminology. “We want them to
be aware that they need to use language that can
be easily understood,” she said. “Medical
professionals use medical lingo that they easily
understand, but most people don’t.”
Other
components of the program include teaching
medical professionals on how to work with
patients with learning or other disabilities,
and providing information on how to present
information using various available resources
such as pictures and health graphics, Peterson
said.
Although aimed
at medical professionals, the October health
literacy training program is open to anyone.
Continuing Professional Education (CPE) credit
is available for nurses, social workers and
counselors, and certified health education
specialists. Continuing Professional Development
(CPD) credit is available for health care
professionals who work with MRDD patients.
Program sponsors include AHEC, OU-HCOM, the Ohio
University Literacy Center and the American
Cancer Society.
The state of
Ohio funds seven Area Health Education Centers (AHECs),
including the one affiliated with OU-HCOM.
In addition to
CPE and CPD opportunities, AHEC offers a variety
of ongoing services, including physician
shadowing opportunities for area high school
students and a resource library of medically
oriented teaching tools for local educators.
Through its Service Learning program, AHEC
trains medical student volunteers to speak about
health issues at schools and community health
fairs.
For more
information about this program, contact Ellen
Peterson, at (740) 593-2258.