Clinical Trials Directory

Trials / Completed

CompletedNCT02922439

Health Literacy Assessment and Intervention to Reduce Disparities: FLIGHT/VIDAS II

Status
Completed
Phase
N/A
Study type
Interventional
Enrollment
335 (actual)
Sponsor
Nova Southeastern University · Academic / Other
Sex
All
Age
40 Years
Healthy volunteers
Accepted

Summary

The purpose of this study will to be to evaluate the effects of a mobile intervention focused on improving the chronic disease self management skills of individuals with low health literacy. The intervention will provide information that culturally and linguistically tailored to participants' level of health literacy.

Detailed description

Health literacy is a critically important skill that helps people to become active participants in their health care. The 2003 National Assessment of Adult Literacy showed that more than 75 million Americans had basic health literacy skills, indicating that as many as 1 in 4 Americans can have difficulty understanding information about their healthcare. Persons in racial and ethnic minorities are likely to have even lower levels of health literacy. Twenty-four percent of blacks (9.5 million persons) and 41% of Hispanics (21 million persons) have below basic levels of health literacy. These persons have lower levels of health literacy and compelling evidence, including our own findings (see below), link race and ethnicity to disparities in health via health literacy. Members of minority groups and older adults are more frequently affected by chronic diseases such as cancer, high blood pressure, heart attack, stroke, diabetes, elevated cholesterol, asthma, hepatitis C, HIV infection, mental health disorders and many others. The twin burdens of chronic disease and low levels of health literacy thus fall disproportionately on those most in need - members of minorities and older adults, all of whom likely to experience one or more chronic conditions while often not having the health literacy skills to help them cope. Chronic disease self-management (CDSM) is a logical target for a general health literacy intervention. In an approach that cuts across specific diseases. CDSM targets problems and skills needed to cope with issues such as fatigue, pain, stress, depression, sleep disturbance and treatment adherence. Studies show that in-person CDSM classes improve patients' functioning and reduce healthcare utilization, but their availability is limited due to the lack of qualified personnel and cost. Similarly, while interventions have been developed to improve health literacy, they are difficult to scale to levels needed to meet the challenge of low health literacy (for more than 40 million persons) due to their cost. Effective interventions with the potential for wider dissemination at reasonable costs are urgently needed. In a previous study, the investigators showed that a computer-delivered tailored information intervention targeting health literacy that can deployed either as an information kiosk in a clinical office or on the Internet could be cost-effective in improving patients' health literacy and adherence. It is not clear, however, whether the same sort of computer-delivered, multimedia and interactive approach will be effective in improving CDSM skills in persons with low baseline levels of health literacy, and if it is, whether its effects will extend beyond health literacy to general health, self-efficacy, activation, and treatment adherence. In this follow-up study the investigators will evaluate this possibility by creating a personally relevant computer-delivered intervention targeting CDSM and health literacy among African-Americans, Hispanics, and white non-Hispanics:

Conditions

Interventions

TypeNameDescription
BEHAVIORALTailored InterventionThe intervention will focus on improving the health literacy of low literacy individuals by providing chronic disease self-management information tailored to cultural and linguistic characteristics of participants.
BEHAVIORALControl InterventionThis intervention will provide information similar to that provided in the control condition, but will not utilize tailoring.

Timeline

Start date
2018-08-21
Primary completion
2020-11-25
Completion
2020-11-25
First posted
2016-10-04
Last updated
2023-09-18

Locations

1 site across 1 country: United States

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT02922439. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.