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Abstract
To determine the relationship of literacy to asthma knowledge and ability to use a
metered-dose inhaler (MDI) among patients with asthma.
Cross-sectional survey.
Emergency department and asthma clinic at an urban public hospital.
Convenience sample of 273 patients presenting to the emergency department for an asthma
exacerbation and 210 patients presenting to a specialized asthma clinic for routine
care.
Measurement of literacy with the Rapid Estimate of Adult Literacy in Medicine, asthma
knowledge (20 question oral test), and demonstration of MDI technique (six-item assessment).
Only 27% of patients read at the high-school level, although two thirds reported being
high-school graduates; 33% read at the seventh- to eighth-grade level, 27% at the
fourth- to sixth-grade level, and 13% at or below the third-grade level. Mean asthma
knowledge scores (+/-SD) were directly related to reading levels: 15.1+/-2.5, 13.9+/-2.5,
13.4+/-2.8, 11.9+/-2.5, respectively (p < 0.01). Patient reading level was the strongest
predictor of asthma knowledge score in multivariate analysis. Poor MDI technique (<
or =3 correct steps) was found in 89% of patients reading at less than the third-grade
level compared with 48% of patients reading at the high-school level. In multivariate
regression analyses, reading level was the strongest predictor of MDI technique.
Inadequate literacy was common and strongly correlated with poorer knowledge of asthma
and improper MDI use.