Thu 27 Jul 2006
“He came in for a “tune-up.” He was 64 years old, with a “history of noncompliance,” according to the resident, and he hadn’t taken his diabetes or cardiac medications for weeks. We weren’t quite sure why. He was alert, he appeared to be intelligent and interested in getting well, and he was able to get his prescriptions filled at a reduced cost. Before he went home, we explained why he needed to take his medicines and reviewed the frequency and doses with him several times. He told us he would follow up with his doctor (though he couldn’t remember the doctor’s name or telephone number) and left the hospital with a handwritten discharge summary.
Five months later, he appeared at the community clinic. He said he was taking his medications, but he wasn’t sure of their names or how often he took them. A medical student and I reviewed the regimen again. The student typed up simple instructions in big letters for him to follow, as well as a list of dates and times at which he should record his blood sugar levels. We asked him to come back in two weeks.
When he returned, the student saw him first — and made a diagnosis that no one else had considered: illiteracy. The clue lay in the jumbled mess of his glucose log. Many of the sugar values were written next to future dates. We quietly asked him to read his list of medications aloud. Haltingly, he told us he couldn’t do it. Born in the rural South, he had left school in the second grade. He lived alone. He had been able to support himself as a gas-station attendant and handyman, but he had never learned to read.
We were stunned. We had tried to avoid jargon and to use simple language in explaining our instructions, and he had seemed to understand everything we had told him. He had seen scores of doctors, nurses, and social workers over the years without anyone’s guessing he had a reading problem.
Although we had been blind to his illiteracy, our patient’s problem is not uncommon.”
For full article: http://content.nejm.org/cgi/content/full/355/4/339?query=TOC
July 27th, 2006 at 9:20 pm
This situation is a common thing in our background in BD. Majority of the patients are not able to contribute in their own well being.
July 28th, 2006 at 10:19 am
Not just in BD. I remember Oxfam’s Education Now campaign seven or eight years ago featuring an elderly man in East Africa who’d been found out in the fields in what sounded like a diabetic coma because he’d been unable tor ead the instructions on his medication. Universal primary education is one of the UN’s Millennium Development Goals for 2015.
July 28th, 2006 at 10:22 am
And having said that, adult illiteracy has been a hidden problem even in the UK for as long as I can remember.
July 28th, 2006 at 12:42 pm
More and More advocacy group and the health educative panel through rich media is a must to stop this but that depends in contingence to the health care budget.
I think TV, Cable are good ways to educate people in Bangladesh regarding health hazard.But here abroad I mean things are always going on to educate and enrich people and make them self concious about health,beauty and looks.
But its also a shame to the Bangladesh community abroad who are so called educated people stay away from Excercise and would spend thousands hrs on chatting and adda and eating rich food but would not go to work out at the Gym or engage with anytype of extra curricular activities.
I think its a common phenomena in highly populated Bangladeshi community to have bypass-surgery and heart attack in early ages from 35-50 years.
The solution is sound education not the best schooling. According to a research done in USA about immigrant Indian Pakistani and Bangladeshi the least turn out to the fitness center visit are the Bangladeshi and I myself is truely aware of this issue they are busy in adda and polah korma kawa dawa and specially the women busy with buying golds and houseold products but doesn’t understand that they need to live longer to enjoy what they have achieved.
thanks
KJ