The lack of adequate communication between patients and health professionals may hamper patient-centred care and shared decision-making. This requires attention to promoting understandable two-way health dialogue and efforts by health professionals and health authorities to find better ways to reach all people. 

Back “Communicate For All: a guide to accessible communication” – France

 Aim and objectives:

“Communicate for all: a guide to accessible communication” is a guide developed by a French health agency (Santé Publique France) based on the concept of literacy.


 Target group:

The guide is intended for all actors involved in designing and sharing information accessible to all, regardless of their audiences and literacy skills: general population, migrants, people in illiteracy situations, older persons, people with disabilities. This reference framework has, among other actors, been designated for health and medico-social facilities and services, to help these organisations become pro-literacy organisations. It is of relevance to health professionals and health promotion professionals.


 Method:

This guide is a very practical tool, illustrated with many examples, as an aid to conceive written, oral, digital, pictorial communication, whatever the patient’s level of health literacy. The guide also identifies pitfalls to avoid and share good practices.


 Outcome:

The guide meets the needs of actors, depending on whether they want to design printed documents, design and/or use images, design web sites or other digital media, design oral communication. It also proposes ways to better consider differences in literacy skills within an organisation.


 Added value:

The guide has been designed in such a way that the actors who consult it are guided, accompanied step by step in the design of their communication, with the ultimate objective of being understood by all.


 “Communicate For All: a guide to accessible communication” – France

 

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