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“What to Do When Your Child Gets Sick” Training A Training for Providers Working with Parents of Young Children

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Page 1: “What to Do When Your Child Gets Sick” Training A Training for Providers Working with Parents of Young Children

“What to Do When Your Child Gets Sick” Training

A Training for Providers Working with Parents of Young Children

Page 2: “What to Do When Your Child Gets Sick” Training A Training for Providers Working with Parents of Young Children

Overview

What is Literacy?

What is Health Literacy?

Why is it important?

What can we do about it?

Page 3: “What to Do When Your Child Gets Sick” Training A Training for Providers Working with Parents of Young Children

What is Literacy?

“An individual’s ability to read, write, and

speak in English and compute and solve

problems, at levels of proficiency necessary to

function on the job, in the family of the

individual, and in society.”

1998 Adult Education and Family Literacy Act

Page 4: “What to Do When Your Child Gets Sick” Training A Training for Providers Working with Parents of Young Children

Learner’s story

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NrdHkXgDE0k

Page 5: “What to Do When Your Child Gets Sick” Training A Training for Providers Working with Parents of Young Children

What is Literacy?

What are some of the things that you should be able to do if you are literate?

Use computers Communicate with a team member on the job Read a newspaper Make informed political decisions Know where to get outside help

Page 6: “What to Do When Your Child Gets Sick” Training A Training for Providers Working with Parents of Young Children

Literacy statistics

Prison inmates who do not have a high school diploma (NCFL, 2002)

Adults on Public Assistance who do not have a high school diploma or GED (National Institute for Literacy)

Adults in Wisconsin (nearly 39%) that qualify for literacy services (National Institute for Literacy, 1998)

46 %

50 %

1.5million

Page 7: “What to Do When Your Child Gets Sick” Training A Training for Providers Working with Parents of Young Children

What does it feel like?

n.” said B y. “W r

“Comeo ets ehav di cku i o n.

eto pth sc

eqon’ anot fqodc

W thave her orn.”

cano

Page 8: “What to Do When Your Child Gets Sick” Training A Training for Providers Working with Parents of Young Children

What people feel about their limited reading ability:

• Ashamed, embarrassed

• Less of a person

• Stupid, anxious, angry

• “Something is wrong with me.”

Page 9: “What to Do When Your Child Gets Sick” Training A Training for Providers Working with Parents of Young Children

The big secret

Percent of low literate adults who have not told their:

Children 52%

Friends 62%

Spouse 68%

Health care providers 75%

Co-workers 85%

Page 10: “What to Do When Your Child Gets Sick” Training A Training for Providers Working with Parents of Young Children

Identifying “red flags”

•“I forgot my glasses. I’ll read this when I get

home.”

•“Let me bring this home so I can discuss it

with my spouse.”

•“I don’t have time to wait today.”

• “I don’t feel well.”

Page 11: “What to Do When Your Child Gets Sick” Training A Training for Providers Working with Parents of Young Children

“Red flags” often misjudged

• Incomplete forms

• Frequently missed

appointments

• Lack of follow-through

Page 12: “What to Do When Your Child Gets Sick” Training A Training for Providers Working with Parents of Young Children

What is Health Literacy?

“The degree to which individuals have the

capacity to obtain, process, and understand

basic information and services needed to

make appropriate decisions regarding their

health.”

- Institute of Medicine, 2004

Page 13: “What to Do When Your Child Gets Sick” Training A Training for Providers Working with Parents of Young Children

Literacy vs. Health Literacy

•Almost everyone will have difficulty with Health Literacy at some point.

• Times of stress• Role of medications

•Much harder for those that do not:

• Read very well; or • Speak English as their primary language.

Page 14: “What to Do When Your Child Gets Sick” Training A Training for Providers Working with Parents of Young Children

2003 National Assessment of Adult Literacy - Health Literacy

12%

14%

22%

53%

Page 15: “What to Do When Your Child Gets Sick” Training A Training for Providers Working with Parents of Young Children

What is “Proficient”? (12%)

Would be able to calculate an employee’s share of health insurance costs for a year, using a table

Page 16: “What to Do When Your Child Gets Sick” Training A Training for Providers Working with Parents of Young Children

What is “Intermediate”? (53%)

Would struggle with being able to determine what time to take a prescription medication.

• Time is based on information on the prescription drug label that relates the timing of medication to eating.

Page 17: “What to Do When Your Child Gets Sick” Training A Training for Providers Working with Parents of Young Children

What is “Basic”? (22%)

Would struggle with being able to give two reasons someone should get screened for a disease even if they have no symptoms

• based on information from a clearly written pamphlet .

Page 18: “What to Do When Your Child Gets Sick” Training A Training for Providers Working with Parents of Young Children

What is “Below Basic”? (14%)

Would not be able to locate and circle the date of a medical appointment on a hospital appointment slip

Page 19: “What to Do When Your Child Gets Sick” Training A Training for Providers Working with Parents of Young Children

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BgTuD7l7LG8

Real people with real problems

Page 20: “What to Do When Your Child Gets Sick” Training A Training for Providers Working with Parents of Young Children

The impact on health

• Poorer health knowledge

• Poorer health status

• Higher death rates

• More hospitalizations

• Higher health care costs

Page 21: “What to Do When Your Child Gets Sick” Training A Training for Providers Working with Parents of Young Children

Money matters

$106-$238 billion is lost every year on health care costs because of poor communication between patients and providers.

In Wisconsin: $3.4-7.6 billion is lost annuallyVernon, J. et al, University of Connecticut, Oct. 2007

Page 22: “What to Do When Your Child Gets Sick” Training A Training for Providers Working with Parents of Young Children

What can you do?

As a patient, you should:

Ask Questions

Page 23: “What to Do When Your Child Gets Sick” Training A Training for Providers Working with Parents of Young Children

“Questions Are the Answer”

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0PudB0uYnFU

Page 24: “What to Do When Your Child Gets Sick” Training A Training for Providers Working with Parents of Young Children

“Good Questions for Good Health”

Diagnosis Treatment Context

What Is my main

problem? What do I need to do?

Why is it important for

me to do this?

Page 25: “What to Do When Your Child Gets Sick” Training A Training for Providers Working with Parents of Young Children

You can offer a great resource:“What To Do When Your Child Gets Sick”

Part of a series

Available in:• English• Spanish• Vietnamese• Korean• Chinese

Page 26: “What to Do When Your Child Gets Sick” Training A Training for Providers Working with Parents of Young Children

“What To Do When Your Child Gets Sick”•Multiple independent studies have shown that giving parents a copy of the easy to read book, What To Do When Your Child Gets Sick, and training them how to use it at home to care for their child's minor ailments and injuries led to:

• 57-61% reduction in ER Visits• 39-56% decrease in doctors/clinic visits• 43-60% fewer missed school days by children due to

illness or injury• 41-47% less work days missed by parents due to child's

illness

Page 27: “What to Do When Your Child Gets Sick” Training A Training for Providers Working with Parents of Young Children

“What To Do When Your Child Gets Sick”

One study that included parents on Medicaid also showed that the reduced hospital ER visits saved more than $550 per family annually.

Page 28: “What to Do When Your Child Gets Sick” Training A Training for Providers Working with Parents of Young Children

In Wisconsin• Recent projects with Head Starts and Childcare

Providers in Northwest WI• 643 parents • 1090 children

• 71% felt that the book helped them deal with a health care problem at home instead of calling a hospital or clinic

• 62% felt that the book helped them deal with a problem at home instead of going to the Emergency Room (ER) or Urgent Care

Page 29: “What to Do When Your Child Gets Sick” Training A Training for Providers Working with Parents of Young Children

What is in the book?

• The book covers the management of more than 50 common childhood illnesses, injuries, and health problems.

• It is written in easy-to-read language for parents and caregivers of children from birth to 8 years of age

Page 30: “What to Do When Your Child Gets Sick” Training A Training for Providers Working with Parents of Young Children

What is in the book?

For each condition, the following

questions are answered:

• What is it? • What do I see? • What can I do at home? • When do I call the doctor or nurse? • What else should I know about it?

Page 31: “What to Do When Your Child Gets Sick” Training A Training for Providers Working with Parents of Young Children

Distribution

• Surveys revealed that those who were introduced to the book and not just handed it, were more likely to use it.

• What do you do with a book that you are given?

• Why would you go back to that book?

• What can you do to make it a “Go To” resource?

Page 32: “What to Do When Your Child Gets Sick” Training A Training for Providers Working with Parents of Young Children

After the book has been given to parents with a short introduction

• After the parents have had a chance to use the book (2-3 months after distribution), conduct the survey located online https://www.surveymonkey.com/s/WhatToDoSurvey.

Page 33: “What to Do When Your Child Gets Sick” Training A Training for Providers Working with Parents of Young Children

Who will answer my questions?

Margarete Cook

[email protected]

Allison Machtan

[email protected]

http: //www.healthliteracywisconsin.org