Abstract
Health literacy is known to influence medication adherence among people living with HIV/AIDS. People who experience difficulty reading health information may benefit from asking others to assist them with reading, interpreting, and understanding medical information. We examined medical chart-abstracted HIV viral load, medication adherence assessed by unannounced pill counts, and adherence improvement strategies among 245 individuals with lower-health literacy who do not request assistance, and 229 who do request assistance with reading and understanding health information. Participants were people living with HIV who were taking antiretroviral therapy and scored below 90% correct on a standardized test of functional health literacy. After controlling for health literacy scores, requesting informational assistance was associated with strategies used to improve adherence; individuals who asked for assistance were significantly more likely to use multiple adherence strategies. However, despite requesting informational assistance and using more adherence strategies, participants who requested informational assistance evidenced poorer treatment adherence and poorer suppression of HIV replication. Requesting assistance was more common among those with the poorest health literacy and therefore greatest challenges to adherence. People living with HIV who have poor health literacy skills may benefit from medication adherence programs and requests for assistance afford opportunities for social interventions.
Introduction
HIV
Although limited literacy skills are known to predict poor treatment adherence, less is known about the strategies used by patients with low-literacy skills to compensate for their challenges in understanding health information and medical instructions. Patients may inform health care providers of their difficulties reading, ask family or friends to help them understand medical information, or request family or friends to accompany them to health care visits. The majority of medical patients with poor health literacy skills state that it would be helpful for their doctor or nurse to know that they do not understand some medical language. 13 However, patients often do not disclose their reading difficulties. Half of patients reading at or below third grade level experience shame or embarrassment about their difficulties reading, as do 19% of those who read between fourth and sixth grade levels. 13 More than two-thirds of patients with lower-health literacy admit that they have trouble reading, and 40% of those who do admit the problem report feeling ashamed of their reading ability. 14 In addition, two out of three patients who report feeling ashamed do not tell their spouse about their reading problems, half do not tell their children, and one in five never tell anyone that they have difficulty reading. 14,15
The current study focused on individuals living with HIV and low-literacy skills who request reading assistance to ameliorate the adverse impacts of poor health literacy and improve health related outcomes. Patients who request assistance with medical information may more effectively access and utilize adherence improvement strategies such as pillboxes, alarms, and reminders. We therefore examined the antiretroviral medication adherence of people living with HIV who have poor health literacy skills and who request information-related assistance in relation to their health care visits. We hypothesized that patients who request assistance interpreting and understanding medical information would demonstrate greater treatment adherence, greater suppression of HIV viral load, and more use of adherence improvement strategies.
Methods
Participants
People living with HIV/AIDS who were currently receiving antiretroviral therapy and scored below 90% correct on a health literacy test (N=474) were reached through community recruitment strategies. Interested persons contacted our research program to schedule an intake assessment appointment.
Measures
Five sources of data were collected in the current study: literacy assessments, information-related assistance interviews, health behavior assessments, unannounced medication adherence pill counts, and chart abstracted viral load and CD4 counts. Each measure is described below.
Health literacy assessments
Reading literacy was assessed at screening with the reading comprehension scale of the Test of Functional Health Literacy in Adults (TOFHLA). 16,17 The scale is timed and includes 50 multiple-choice items, in which selecting the correct word among four options completes sentences from standard medical instructions. Scores ranged from 0 to 50 with the percent correct computed for the total score. Participants who scored below 90% correct were enrolled in the study.
We also administered the TOFHLA Numeracy Scale to assess numerical reasoning for medical instructions. This scale is administered in an interactive interview where participants are provided with medical instructions that require mental computation to arrive at answers such as the times of upcoming medical appointments, medication dosing instructions, and interpreting lab test results.
Reading assistance interviews
Participants were asked whether they acknowledge difficulty reading or trouble understanding what they read. We also asked participants if they have told their doctor or pharmacist that they experience difficulty reading. Participants also indicated if they experience vision problems or wear corrective lenses. To assess requests for medical information assistance, we asked participants the following three questions: “Do you ever bring someone to a medical appointment to help you understand and remember what your doctor tells you?” “Do you ever ask someone to help you fill out forms for getting benefits or services?” and “Do you ever ask someone to help you with reading instructions about your health and medications?” Responses were made on a Yes/No format and were used to place participants into two groups: (a) those who do not request informational assistance, and (b) those who do request informational assistance.
Computerized health behavior interviews
Assessments were administered using audio-computerized self-interviewing (ACASI) to reduce demand characteristics and limit socially evoked response biases. 18,19 The interview required approximately 30 min. Participants reported basic demographic information including age, gender, education, income, employment, and disability status. We also assessed 14 HIV-related symptoms of 2-weeks duration using a measure reported in previous research; 15 symptoms included shortness of breath; dry cough; oral or throat sores; thrush, Candida, or oral white patches; fatigue; unintentional weight loss; recurring fever; and night sweats. Participants reported the last time they had seen their doctor and whether they had missed a doctor's appointment in the previous month.
To assess global alcohol use we administered the Alcohol Use Disorders Identification Test (AUDIT), a 10-item scale designed to measure alcohol consumption and identify risks for alcohol abuse and dependence. 20 The first three items of the AUDIT represent quantity and frequency of alcohol use and the remaining seven items concern problems incurred from drinking alcohol. Scores of greater than 8 indicate high-risk for alcohol use disorders and problem drinking, with demonstrated specificities between 0.80 and 0.90. 21 In the current sample, the AUDIT was internally consistent, alpha=0.90. Participants also completed the Centers for Epidemiological Studies Depression Scale (CESD), which asks how often they had specific thoughts, feelings, and behaviors in the past 7 days, responding 0=no days, 1=1–2 days, 2=3–4 days, 3=5–7 days. We used the CESD cognitive and affective subscale to avoid confounding somatic symptoms of depression with the physical symptoms of HIV and other chronic health conditions.
The computerized interview also assessed use of medication adherence strategies. Participants were asked whether they use seven common memory-based strategies for improving medication adherence. 22,23 The strategies included using a pillbox, keeping medications in a visible place, alarms, and reminders. Responses included whether the participant never uses the strategy, sometimes (intermittent use), or always (consistent use).
Medication adherence
Participants consented to three monthly-unannounced telephone-based pill counts for the duration of the study, constituting a prospective measure of adherence. Unannounced pill counts are reliable and valid in assessing medication adherence when conducted in homes 24 and on the telephone with people living with HIV and low-literacy skills. 8,25 In this study, we conducted unannounced cell-phone based pill counts. Participants were provided with a free cell phone that restricted service for project contacts and emergency use. Following office-based training in the pill counting procedure, participants were called every 21–35 days at unscheduled times by a phone assessor over the course of 3 months. Adherence data represents the average percentage of pills taken as prescribed over three consecutive months. We defined suboptimal adherence as <85% of pills taken. 26
Chart-abstracted viral load and CD4 counts
We used a participant assisted method for collecting baseline chart abstracted viral load and CD4 cell counts from participants' medical records. Participants were given a form that requested their doctor's office to provide results and dates of their most recent viral load and CD4 cell counts. The form included a place for the provider's office stamp or signature to assure authenticity.
Procedures
Men and women living with HIV were recruited from AIDS services and community outreach to participate in a medication adherence intervention study. The data used in this study represent the run-in assessments that were collected prior to any intervention activities in that trial. The study was conducted in Atlanta, GA, a city with among the fastest growing HIV epidemics in the United States, between November 2008 and April 2011. Health literacy assessments were conducted prior to study entry to determine eligibility. Information assistance groups were formed on the basis of responses to the three health-related information assistance questions described above. Participants who indicated that they request help from others to understand or read health or medical information or complete health-related forms were defined as the group that requests informational assistance and were compared to their counterparts who do not request assistance.
Data analyses
Participants who requested reading assistance were compared to those who did not request assistance using bivariate logistic regression analyses. We report odds ratios and 95% confidence intervals (CI) adjusted for health literacy scores. Multivariable logistic regressions were subsequently conducted for adherence, viral load, and adherence strategies controlling for health literacy scores. All analyses tested a priori hypothesized relationships and used p<0.05 to define statistical significance.
Results
Nearly half of lower-literacy participants acknowledged experiencing difficulty reading. However, only one in three participants indicated that their doctor was aware of their reading problems, and only 15% of participants stated that their pharmacist was aware that they have trouble reading (Table 1). Results showed that 48% (n=229) of participants reported requesting reading assistance in health-related settings, with 37% requesting help filling out forms, 36% requesting help reading medical instructions, and 14% bringing someone to the doctor to help them understand medical instructions.
Requesting information assistance, demographics, and health outcomes
Participants who requested informational assistance had fewer years of education, poorer reading literacy (TOFHLA) scores, poorer numeracy literacy, and were more likely to miss doctor appointments than those who did not request assistance. Requesting informational assistance was associated with HIV viral load in the direction opposite of that predicted; participants who requested informational assistance were less likely to have an undetectable viral load (Table 2). There were no other differences between informational assistance groups for demographic and health characteristics.
Analyses of nonliteracy measures adjusted for health literacy scores; * p<0.05, ** p<0.01.
Requesting information assistance and medication adherence
Counter to our hypothesized direction of association, participants who requested information assistance had significantly poorer medication adherence assessed by unannounced prospective pill counts after adjusting for health literacy. This finding was observed for both the average medication adherence as well as adherence that was categorically defined by 85% of pills taken (Table 2). In contrast to medication adherence, results showed that participants who requested informational assistance were significantly more likely to have used all seven adherence improvement strategies, including use of pillboxes, leaving medications in visible places, use of alarm clocks, asking friends or family to remind them, using mealtimes as reminders, and use of reminder notes (Table 3).
p<0.05, ** p<0.01; aadjusted for health literacy score.
Multivariable models
We tested a multivariable logistic regression model with information assistance groups entered and as the dependent variable and viral load and categorically defined adherence entered as independent variables, controlling for health literacy scores. Results indicated that individuals who requested informational assistance demonstrated poorer adherence, OR=0.59, p<0.05, 95%CI (0.39–0.91) and poorer HIV suppression, OR=0.63, p<0.01, 95%CI (0.42–0.96). In addition, multivariable analysis of associations between information assistance groups and all adherence strategies, controlling for literacy scores showed that greater use of all seven ART adherence strategies remained associated with requesting assistance (Table 3).
Discussion
Health literacy is a robust predictor of HIV treatment adherence. 8,11 In this sample of people living with HIV who scored low on a health literacy test and were taking antiretroviral medications, the average ART adherence was 84% of pills taken as prescribed, and less than half of participants achieved the clinically meaningful cut-off of 85% adherent. 26 These levels of adherence indicate risks for treatment failure and the potential to develop HIV treatment resistant viral strains. Individuals who experience the most difficulty reading and understanding medical information were the most likely to request assistance to understand health-related information. Not surprisingly, requesting help to interpret and understand medical information was also associated with fewer years of education, poorer numerical literacy skills, and more likely to miss doctor appointments.
Also consistent with previous research, we found that few participants had disclosed their reading difficulties. Although nearly half of participants openly acknowledged their difficulty reading, only 34% had informed their doctor, and 15% made their pharmacist aware of their reading challenges. People may experience multiple barriers to disclosing their reading difficulties, including a sense of shame and literacy-related stigmas. 7,14 For people living with HIV infection, the challenges to disclosure are further complicated by AIDS-related stigmas. 27,28 The opportunities one has to request assistance understanding health information will therefore also depend on the degree to which people living with HIV disclose their HIV status. Addressing both AIDS and literacy-related stigma will therefore play key roles in developing strategies to assist HIV-positive patients with poor literacy skills. Other factors that were not assessed in the current study that may have also impacted the results are personality characteristics such as conscientiousness, locus of control, general self-efficacy, and social orientations such as introversion and extroversion. 29
Although we predicted that requesting assistance with reading and interpreting health information would compensate for the challenges experienced by those with the lowest literacy skills, our results found the opposite; people who requested assistance remained the least adherent and had the poorest health outcomes. Poorer adherence among those who requested informational assistance occurred despite their reporting greater use of every adherence improvement strategy we assessed. This pattern of findings suggests that the people with the most difficulty understanding medical information do request help and obtain access to adherence assistance strategies. However, their efforts and the assistance they receive appear insufficient to achieve levels of adherence necessary to reap optimal benefits of antiretroviral therapies. These results therefore may inform interventions targeted to improve ART adherence for lower-literacy patients.
The results of the current study should be interpreted in light of its methodological limitations. The sample of people with HIV and poor literacy skills was one of convenience and cannot be considered representative of people living with HIV. The study was conducted in the southeastern United States, again restricting the generalizability of our findings. We also relied on an interpersonal interview to assess disclosure of reading difficulties and requests for informational assistance. The same social inhibitions of shame and stigma that interfere with openly acknowledging reading challenges may have impeded their openness in our interview. Therefore, we should assume that more participants experience difficulty acknowledging their reading difficulties and other socially sensitive behaviors than were apparent in our results. Finally, we relied on self-reported measures to assess adherence improvement strategies that may have been influenced by recall and social desirability biases. With these limitations in mind, we believe that our findings have implications for interventions to assist people living with HIV and lower-literacy skills.
Few interventions have been tested for improving health behaviors and health outcomes for people with poor literacy skills, and even fewer have been directed at improving HIV treatment adherence for this population. Our findings suggest that individuals with moderate levels of reading literacy may benefit from adherence counseling and skills building interventions. For example, behavioral self-management counseling interventions often instruct patients to use several of the strategies we found rarely used among people who did not request informational assistance in our study. 30,31
Our findings also suggest that more direct and intensive interventions may be needed for people who are the most challenged by poor reading skills. We did not see evidence that requesting assistance and using behavioral self-management strategies are helping these patients to achieve optimal treatment outcomes. However, requests for assistance offer clear opportunities for interventions. Health care providers, family, and friends may be enlisted to provide adherence support beyond merely reading and understanding medical information. Building supportive and skills-based adherence assistance networks may therefore capitalize on requests for help from those with the lowest literacy skills. Research is needed to test interventions such as direct observation therapy and daily medication reminders for this population. 32,33 In addition, intensive counseling approaches with long-term continuous adherence monitoring that have been useful in other significantly challenged populations such as those with substance abuse disorders and serious mental illness may prove beneficial to people with the poorest literacy skills. 34,35 Given the risks posed by HIV treatment resistance to individual and public health, interventions to improve the adherence of this vulnerable population are urgently needed.
Footnotes
Acknowledgments
This project was supported by the National Institute of Mental Health (NIMH) grants R01-MH82633 and T32MH074387.
Author Disclosure Statement
No competing financial interests exist.
