Being able to read and understand words like anemia, hormones and seizure means a patient with heart failure may be less likely to be hospitalized, says study

REALM-R is a word recognition test designed to assist medical professionals in identifying patients at risk for poor literacy skills and playing a role in predicting their ability to control a chronic condition like heart failure. Adults are asked to de-code or pronounce a short list of words. The test takes less than two minutes to administer and score.
Emory researchers administered the REALM-R test to 154 heart failure outpatients from January 2008 to July 2009. People with a score of 60 or lower (considered low or marginal) had a 55 percent higher rate of hospitalization for any reason.Among the 154 patients, 30 had a low REALM-R score. People with annual family income less than $50,000, African-Americans, and people without a college-level education were much more likely to have a low REALM-R score (ten-fold, five-fold and five-fold, respectively). Gender was not linked to REALM-R score.What doctors call "hard events" (death, urgent cardiac transplantation, or ventricular assist device implantation) did not increase based on low REALM-R score.
Source-Eurekalert