A Nation Of Nonreaders

Nearly half of all adults in America cannot read or comprehend material if it is written at or above the eighth grade level. Many of these functional illiterates and marginal literates are our patients. Some of them are our coworkers. However, the true scope of this problem stays hidden because people who do not read well are very good at masking their poor reading skills. Nurses Announcements Archive Article

I first noticed this serious problem when I was 19 years old and working at a grocery store.

One of my coworkers, a middle-aged mother of three who had been married for 15 years, asked for my assistance with reading and properly completing a time-off request form. "I am not good at writing things," she chimed with a smile on her face. She added, "I forgot my glasses, so I can't see this paper too well today."

While helping her with the form, which was written at a fifth or sixth grade level, I made some silent observations. First of all, this woman was a high school graduate. Moreover, I never saw her wearing eyeglasses during the entire year that I worked with her. Her excuses of being a bad writer and forgetting her glasses were likely intended to mask an awful truth.

My coworker did not know how to read very well.

When I started working as a nurse, I suspected that some of my coworkers lacked basic literacy skills. For instance, a middle-aged nursing assistant with whom I once worked started crying one afternoon several years ago after staring at a letter that had been given to her by the human resources manager. The assistant asked, "What is this paper? Are they going to fire me?"

After glancing at the letter, I determined within a few seconds that it was the same preprinted memo that every employee in the facility had received regarding yearly open enrollment for health insurance. I reassured her and gently told her about the letter's contents, and she thanked me. I also surmised that this woman would have never cried over the memo in the first place if she was comfortable reading the written word.

Many people do not read very well. According to the 2003 National Assessment of Adult Literacy, 63 million adults in the U.S. do not read proficiently enough to comprehend an article written at the eighth grade level and another 30 million people read at or below a fifth grade level. In other words, a whopping 93 million people possess low levels of literacy. This is almost half of all adults in America! However, the true scope of this problem lurks in the shadows because functional illiterates and marginal literates are usually very astute at covering up their poor reading skills.

It's a sad fact of life that many of our patients and some of our coworkers do not read well. For example, a patient who delays signing consent paperwork because he's tired or forgot his glasses (even though he denied wearing eyeglasses during the initial assessment) might be an illiterate. The CNA at the nursing home who procrastinates when asked to write a statement regarding a fall and always requests help from others to complete her flow sheets might be a nonreader. Since many people who do not read are well-dressed, articulate and work in respectable occupations, it is a problem that cannot be detected by simply looking at a person or studying one's demographic information. In addition, people with poor reading skills have spent much of their lives learning creative ways to hide their inadequacies from others.

Low literacy skills can negatively affect patient outcomes. First of all, the marginally literate patient might cheerfully nod, pretend to understand, and simply sign written discharge instructions when he did not comprehend the paperwork. In one case, a patient was given full-sized 8x11 inch papers that were light blue in color and did not realize that these were prescriptions because he could not read them well enough. Some patients are readmitted for the same chronic illnesses repeatedly. While noncompliance might be a major part of these readmissions, one must wonder if these people really understand what we're telling them.

There are no simple solutions to this complex problem. However, nurses can help in small ways by providing clear verbal discharge instructions and taking great care to avoid medical jargon. The nurse should check for understanding by requesting that the patient repeat the instructions in his own words and watch as the patient demonstrates any hands-on skills that he was taught by staff. Patients who are marginally literate can read and comprehend pamphlets if they are written at a sixth grade level.

If you suspect that a subordinate coworker who reports to you is unable to read well, use simple verbal directives, keep explanations short, and ask the person to restate the directions in his/her own words to ensure comprehension. Do not confront the coworker on the alleged inability to read or do anything to embarrass him/her.

Specializes in Cardio-Pulmonary; Med-Surg; Private Duty.

We watched this video in my Fundamentals of Nursing class. It's "long" (23 minutes) but was incredibly eye-opening for me. If you have the time, I highly recommend that you watch this video:

As someone who was reading at a 12th grade level in the 5th grade, the concept of functional illiteracy was relatively foreign to me. Seeing this video, which shows regular everyday folks who can't read/understand their prescription instructions, hit me like a ton of bricks.

This is a real problem in our society... one that I had no clue was so prevalent.

Specializes in ICU.

I had no idea how prevalent illiteracy or marginal literacy were, either, until nursing school. It really saddens me for these people, for our profession, and for society in general.

Specializes in OR, Nursing Professional Development.

I am absolutely shocked by some of the discussion board postings in my MSN classes. Typos, incorrect words (such as worse vs. worst), mixing up similarly spelled words (they're, their, there; waist, waste; etc.). And these aren't even from people whose native language isn't English. I won't say I'm perfect, but I'd think that people who are writing something for a grade would make the extra effort to proofread.

I found it quite eye-opening the level of illiteracy in my area and also the amazing number of ways people can find to cover for it. I do find the schools share in the responsibility by teaching to the lowest achievement level in the entire class, but parents are ultimately the ones responsible for their children's education. They are responsible for encouraging learning, helping with homework (but not just doing it), and serving as examples.

I have read to my children since the day they were born...literally. Actually, I found myself reading my books out loud when I was pregnant. My children have a love of reading. As they both got a bit older they wanted to read to me or my husband. While they didn't have the ability to actually read at that point, they would 'read' what they saw in the pictures or if no pictures, they would make up stories as they read from the book.

Both would much rather read a good book than watch tv (thankfully neither like video games) and neither like eBooks, it must be an old fashioned paper book. Both of them have always read many, many grade levels above their actual grade. My 10 year old is reading at a 11th/12th grade level according to her teacher. Last year she was at a 10th grade level.

It's very sad that in this day and age people still have poor reading skills and cannot comprehend a relatively simple paper.

Specializes in Critical Care (ICU/CVICU).

great thread! So glad I was (and still am) an avid reader! Another thing that colleges do that essentially "hide" the bad writers: group papers! The worst writers make sure to allow the best writer in the group to take the lead. That's how it was in my nursing school. I'm a strong writer and it would irritate me that the bad writers would send me atrocious work to revise! Then when the final paper is complete, who gets the A? Everybody. Then they get to advance without ever getting the opportunity to write correctly. Group papers are one way bad writing is made undetectable.

I watched an older nurse chart her assessments one day. I was standing behind her and she didn't realize I was watching, but my elementary school aged child is WAY more literate than this nurse was/is. She could not spell even the most simple words. I was absolutely shocked. I would compare her notes to that of a first grader (no kidding). It was as if she spelled everything out the way it sounds. If a first grader and this 50ish or 60ish year old woman both typed up a paper and printed it out, I would not be able to tell which paper belonged to which person. I'm just guessing that she has a disability (maybe dyslexia) that has allowed her to get by all this time. I bet spell check was a life saver for her! That's actually how she gets by with electronic charting. She copies/pastes her notes into a word document, spell checks, and then transfers them back over. It's wild and it takes her FOREVER to chart.

Specializes in Sleep medicine,Floor nursing, OR, Trauma.

This video was shown at a conference I attended recently. It's long, but it is worth watching. In fact, every nursing student, every nurse, every doctor should see this video.

Yeah, it's like that. I promise. Really.

Thank you, again, Commuter for posting this article and bringing this issue to light.

Thank you for this article. I had no idea how big of an issue illiteracy was in the United States.

In 11th grade English, I fell in love with The Great Gatsby, The Catcher in the Rye, and Walt Whitman's Leaves of Grass.

It appears that the expectations for my generation are a lot lower than those for previous generations. I am afraid that technology has devalued important skills like reading and writing...And most importantly, it has devalued the importance of literature.

Specializes in Cardio-Pulmonary; Med-Surg; Private Duty.
This video was shown at a conference I attended recently. It's long, but it is worth watching. In fact, every nursing student, every nurse, every doctor should see this video.

Yeah, it's like that. I promise. Really.

Thank you, again, Commuter for posting this article and bringing this issue to light.

Great minds -- that's the same video I posted earlier! :D

It really is worth the watch, people!

Tl;DR ;)

Specializes in CRNA, Finally retired.

The university I attended for my first degree (BA) deducted one letter grade for every spelling or typo in your papers. That gets your attention. Now I know I'm going to get flamed for voting on the side of BSN requirement to take NYCLEX ( a more difficult NYCEX) but all these liberal arts courses, that posters say are irrelevant, force you to use your brain muscle. They force you to reach and stretch to achieve something you'd never do unless it was required. Unfortunately, colleges have abandoned their ethics in order to collect tuition payments from people who didn't get ready for college. Perhaps they should be given a second chance and take a grade 13 (a good return on my tax money) so they can pass the literacy test that should be a requirement for ever college since so many colleges have such lax requirements. Taxpayers have a right to be furious about their dollars going to schools which have abandoned their mission. My personal experience was that a state university was much more rigorous than private school. The state university accepted 3 students for every 2 seats that existed after the first semester. 1/3 of the students were flunked out by second semester and, if they wanted to continue their education, could transfer to one of the less rigorous state colleges. Times have changed for sure. State universities in my state have gained a lot of prestige because they're so competitive. Remember that private schools usually get federal dollars so we have

every right to demand better standards for their graduates.

Specializes in Med-Surg, NICU.

You should see some of the lecture slides in my class. It is as if my professor doesn't know the difference between "than" or "then" and other basic grammar. As an aspiring novelist, I just shake my head.