Spine Surgeon Estimation of Patient Health Literacy

IF 0.2 Q4 ORTHOPEDICS
Elizabeth Stiles , Charla Fischer , Yong Kim
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Lower health literacy is associated with worse patient outcomes, yet physicians tend to overestimate patients’ health literacy. To assess spine surgeons’ ability to accurately estimate patients’ health literacy, this study administered the Newest Vital Sign (NVS) to spine surgery patients and recorded 2 spine surgeons’ estimations of those patients’ health literacy levels. Spine surgeons’ estimates were in moderate agreement with patients’ NVS scores, and spine surgeons tended to overestimate patients’ health literacy. Surgeons’ estimates were more accurate for patients with the following characteristics: Adequate health literacy, White, age 60 and older, and male. These findings highlight the potential for routine NVS administration to promote health equity, quality, and safety in spine surgery.

脊柱外科医生对患者健康素养的估计
较低的健康素养与较差的患者预后有关,但医生往往会高估患者的健康素养。为了评估脊柱外科医生准确估计患者健康素养的能力,本研究对脊柱手术患者进行了最新生命体征(NVS)测试,并记录了两名脊柱外科医生对患者健康素养水平的估计。脊柱外科医生的估计值与患者的 NVS 分数基本一致,脊柱外科医生倾向于高估患者的健康素养水平。外科医生对具有以下特征的患者的估计更为准确:有足够的健康知识、白人、60 岁及以上、男性。这些发现凸显了常规 NVS 管理在促进脊柱手术的健康公平、质量和安全方面的潜力。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
0.40
自引率
0.00%
发文量
40
审稿时长
83 days
期刊介绍: Operative Techniques in Orthopaedics is an innovative, richly illustrated resource that keeps practitioners informed of significant advances in all areas of surgical management. Each issue of this atlas-style journal explores a single topic, often offering alternate approaches to the same procedure. Its current, definitive information keeps readers in the forefront of their specialty.
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