Literature Review of Type 2 Diabetes Management and Health Literacy

Author:

Alsaedi Rulla1,McKeirnan Kimberly1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Washington State University College of Pharmacy and Pharmaceutical Sciences, Spokane, WA

Abstract

Objective The purpose of this literature review was to identify educational approaches addressing low health literacy for people with type 2 diabetes. Low health literacy can lead to poor management of diabetes, low engagement with health care providers, increased hospitalization rates, and higher health care costs. These challenges can be even more profound among minority populations and non-English speakers in the United States. Methods A literature search and standard data extraction were performed using PubMed, Medline, and EMBASE databases. A total of 1,914 articles were identified, of which 1,858 were excluded based on the inclusion criteria, and 46 were excluded because of a lack of relevance to both diabetes management and health literacy. The remaining 10 articles were reviewed in detail. Results Patients, including ethnic minorities and non-English speakers, who are engaged in diabetes education and health literacy improvement initiatives and ongoing follow-up showed significant improvement in A1C, medication adherence, medication knowledge, and treatment satisfaction. Clinicians considering implementing new interventions to address diabetes care for patients with low health literacy can use culturally tailored approaches, consider ways to create materials for different learning styles and in different languages, engage community health workers and pharmacists to help with patient education, use patient-centered medication labels, and engage instructors who share cultural and linguistic similarities with patients to provide educational sessions. Conclusion This literature review identified a variety of interventions that had a positive impact on provider-patient communication, medication adherence, and glycemic control by promoting diabetes self-management through educational efforts to address low health literacy.

Publisher

American Diabetes Association

Subject

Endocrinology, Diabetes and Metabolism,Internal Medicine

Reference30 articles.

1. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention . Statistics about diabetes. Available from https://www.diabetes.org/diabetes-basics/statistics. Accessed 17 July 2020

2. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention . New CDC report: more than 100 million Americans have diabetes or prediabetes. Available from https://www.cdc.gov/media/releases/2017/p0718-diabetes-report.html. Accessed 17 December 2020

3. Health literacy: report of the Council on Scientific Affairs;Ad Hoc Committee on Health Literacy for the Council on Scientific Affairs, American Medical Association;JAMA,1999

4. Association of health literacy with diabetes outcomes;Schillinger;JAMA,2002

5. Health literacy and the risk of hospital admission;Baker;J Gen Intern Med,1998

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