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[HealthLiteracy 1922] Re: Terminology, Labelling and Naming

Johnston-Lloyd, Linda (HRSA)

LJohnston-Lloyd at hrsa.gov
Thu Apr 17 15:24:25 EDT 2008



Nicola,
I agree with you as I feel low literacy may denote a stigma to some
people.

In the HRSA Unified Health Communication course, we agreed to use
"limited heath literacy" it may be limited by worry about your care or
diagnosis or inability to understand the words or stress with a visit to
the doctor where you have received bad news, etc. any number of reasons
can affect one's literacy at a given time.
http://www.hrsa.gov/healthliteracy/training.htm


Linda Johnston Lloyd, HRSA Health Literacy Coordinator ~HRSA Center for
Quality ~ Room 7-100 5600 Fishers Lane ~ Rockville, MD 20857
p: 301-443-0831~ f: 301-443-9795 ljohnston-lloyd at hrsa.gov ~ www.hrsa.gov



-----Original Message-----
From: Davies, Nicola [mailto:NDavies at dthr.ab.ca]
Sent: Wednesday, April 16, 2008 1:19 PM
To: The Health and Literacy Discussion List
Subject: [HealthLiteracy 1920] Re: Terminology, Labelling and Naming

I have a question for the list - just an informal survey.

How do you feel about referring to the people we tailor materials for as
"low literate" or "low health literate"? I have read lots of excellent
opinion pieces on naming of people with tangible diseases; e.g., "people
with diabetes" rather than "diabetics". However, using the phrase
"people who have low literacy" or "People with low health literacy" just
doesn't ring fair, simply because we have already established that
literacy is not a personal issue, but rather a social one, and cannot be
owned wholly by the individual we are referring to.
So, how do you refer to the people we are ultimately working for?

I am looking forward to seeing what you all think.

Regards,
Nicola

Nicola Davies, BA
Health Literacy Specialist
Wellness Centre Coordinator
Consumer Health Information Technician
ndavies at dthr.ab.ca
(403) 352-7643
Red Deer Regional Hospital
3942-50A Ave
Red Deer, AB
T4N 4E7

-----Original Message-----
From: healthliteracy-bounces at nifl.gov
[mailto:healthliteracy-bounces at nifl.gov]On Behalf Of Champ-Blackwell,
Siobhan
Sent: Wednesday, April 16, 2008 9:42 AM
To: The Health and Literacy Discussion List
Subject: [HealthLiteracy 1918] FW: [caphis] Fw: [NPInfo] iPods for
PatientEducation


This email has gone through several listservs, i am just sending on the
original. Pretty interesting use of ipods. I like that the video shows
an older person using it.
Siobhan



----- Forwarded Message ----
From: "repyke at infionline.net" <repyke at infionline.net>
To: Telehealth-L <TELEHEALTH at LISTSERV.ICORS.ORG>
Cc: NP Info <npinfo at nurse.net>; EHEALTH <EHEALTH at LISTSERV.ICORS.ORG>;
nrsing-l <nrsing-l at mailman.amia.org>; CONSUMER-HEALTH-INFORMATICS
<CONSUMER-HEALTH-INFORMATICS at JISCMAIL.AC.UK>
Sent: Thursday, April 10, 2008 5:58:29 PM
Subject: [NPInfo] iPods for Patient Education

Dear All,

There is an interesting video clippng on how Grayson H. Wheatley III,
M.D.,a cardiovascular surgeon at the Arizona Heart Institute, uses video
iPods to educate his patients about diet, exercise, heart and surgical
procedures.

You can view the clip at

http://www.nursezone.com/Nursing-News-Events/media-library.aspx

Thank you very much.

Regards
Jai

--
A.U.Jai Ganesh,
Project Coordinator,
Telemedicine & eHealth,
Prasanthi Nilayam.
India.

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