• J Am Pharm Assoc (2003) · Sep 2009

    Review

    Health literacy: a barrier to pharmacist-patient communication and medication adherence.

    • Lucy Nkukuma Ngoh.
    • College of Pharmacy, Ferris State University, Big Rapids, MI 49307, USA. ngohl@ferris.edu
    • J Am Pharm Assoc (2003). 2009 Sep 1; 49 (5): e132-46; quiz e147-9.

    ObjectiveTo present a summary of the existing literature on medication nonadherence, health literacy, and use of written patient information in health care and pharmacy in particular.Data SourcesSearches of Medline, PubMed, and International Pharmaceutical Abstracts databases were conducted using one or more of the following terms: adherence/nonadherence, compliance/noncompliance, printed/written information, literacy, patient education, communication, and health literacy. These terms were combined with the following search terms: drug information, readability, medication/drug, patient, pharmacy/pharmacist, and prescription. References of pertinent articles were hand searched to retrieve additional articles.Data ExtractionBy the author.Data SynthesisArticles were grouped and summarized into three broad categories (nonadherence, health literacy, and communicating health information to patients), with an emphasis on the use of written patient information in health care and pharmacy practice in particular. The complexities inherent in nonadherence behavior, health literacy, and patient education are summarized, and suggestions for enhancing medication adherence, especially for patients with low health literacy skills, are provided.ConclusionThe health literacy skills of American adults have not changed considerably during the previous decade. This makes use of written patient medication information in pharmacy practice problematic for some patients. Limited health literacy has been associated with poorer health, medication nonadherence, medication errors, higher medical expenses, and increased hospitalization. A need exists for identifying patients with limited health literacy and tailoring medication counseling to their needs.

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