Development and evaluation of a multilingual caregiver electronic rounds summary.

Document Type

Article

Publication Date

2-24-2026

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Health literacy-informed and language-concordant written materials can promote caregiver understanding of care plans although are not commonly used in inpatient rounds.

OBJECTIVES: We sought to develop and evaluate a health literacy-informed, multilingual electronic real-time summary of rounds for hospitalized patients (the Rounds eSummary).

METHODS: A multidisciplinary team developed the Rounds eSummary using health literacy, communication, and language equity best practices and multiple rounds of piloting. To generate the eSummary, clinicians completed a link with closed-ended options for various rounds components (e.g., illness severity, plan), caregiver's preferred language, and contact information. This generated an electronic PDF rounds summary (15 possible languages) emailed or texted to the family. We used descriptive statistics to analyze eSummaries (n = 437) created from October 25, 2024 to February 1, 2025. Separately, for a purposive sample of English eSummaries (n = 12) that represented different diagnoses and plans, two independent raters examined reading grade level (average of five formulas), understandability, and actionability (Patient Education Materials Assessment Tool for Printable Materials).

RESULTS: Rounds eSummaries were generated in eight languages across three sites; the most common languages were English (89%), Spanish (6.2%), and Portuguese (1.8%). Plans commonly included medicines (42%), nutrition (30%), and oxygen (24%). More than half (61%) were accessed at least once by the patient/caregiver; of the eSummaries accessed, the average engagement time was 29.1 s (standard deviation 25.2). The average reading grade level was 6.8 (standard deviation 0.6, range 5.8-7.8). Overall understandability and actionability scores were 87% and 60%, respectively.

CONCLUSION: We designed a usable Rounds eSummary that addressed language and health literacy barriers.

TRIAL REGISTRATION: ClinicalTrials.gov identifier: NCT05591066.

Publication Title

J Hosp Med

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