• Family medicine · Jan 2016

    Long-Term Effects of a Health Literacy Curriculum for Medical Students.

    • Clifford A Coleman, Sylvia Peterson-Perry, and Tracy Bumsted.
    • Department of Family Medicine, Oregon Health & Science University.
    • Fam Med. 2016 Jan 1; 48 (1): 49-53.

    Background And ObjectivesAlthough there are reports of short-term benefits of health literacy curricula for improving health care professionals' communication with patients, no studies have included long-term follow-up. We sought to determine (1) whether a pre-clerkship health literacy training can improve medical students' perceived knowledge and intended behaviors vis-á-vis communication with patients who have low health literacy, (2) the longevity of any such impact at 12 months, and (3) the impact of a follow-up training 1 year later.MethodsWe conducted pre- and post-training assessments of self-perceived knowledge and perceived and planned behavior following a health literacy training for first-year medical students, with a 12-month follow-up training and repeat pre/post assessment.ResultsAmong 48 pre-clerkship students, improvement was reported on 10 of 12 items following the Year 1 training. At 12-month follow-up, prior to the Year 2 training, ratings on 8 of 10 items had regressed to baseline levels. Nine of these items again improved significantly after the Year 2 training. Students were asked after both trainings if they felt they had overestimated their understanding of health literacy; significantly more students agreed with this statement following the Year 2 training than the Year 1 training.ConclusionsAmong a cohort of pre-clerkship medical students, improvements in perceived knowledge and planned behavior vis-á-vis health literacy training largely did not persist at 12-month follow-up. Efforts to teach medical students about health literacy principles and practices should include a longitudinal or integrated format, rather than a one-time lecture format.

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