To mark Health Literacy Awareness Month, we’re shining a light on some of our outstanding consultants who don’t just breathe life into content, but crucially make it readable, understandable and actionable for the people it’s designed to reach.
Meet Sally Snow and find out how a Cambridge graduate with a PhD in evolutionary molecular biology ended up building a career focused on demystifying science and making health information understandable to the general public.
Like most of us, Sally wears many hats – writer, researcher, mother, environmental campaigner.
Clear, simple and direct communication is essential for all of these roles. Health literacy work is a natural fit.
In her spare time, Sally loves to be outdoors – walking, cycling, foraging or rock climbing with her family.
1. What does health literacy mean to you in 10 words or less?
Overcoming barriers to better health and safe use of medicines.
2. What drove you to specialise in health literacy in the first place?
Writing for patients and members of the general public is the part of healthcare communications that I enjoy most. I have seen the real impact it can have on peoples’ lives and health. Starting my career in clinical research over ten years ago, I quickly realised how confusing and frightening medical and legal jargon can be – especially for a person deciding whether to take an unproven treatment for a potentially serious health condition. Clear, simple language and visuals can help to empower people to make better, safer health decisions.
3. What is the most common health literacy mistake you see in published health information?
Information overload. This can happen for a number of reasons, including: not having a clear aim for the content; trying to cover too many topics in a single item; or not fully understanding your audience’s information needs. Information includes pictures or images as well as words – if it doesn’t support understanding, leave it out.
4. What are your top three tips for good health literacy?
- Know your audience
- Less is more
- Test your assumptions
5. What health literacy project have you worked on that you are most proud of?
I’m most proud of updating a cardiology disease awareness campaign by integrating user feedback and health literacy best practices. It was a fantastic collaboration between myself, designer, animator, client and patient representatives and very rewarding to see the results.
The Difference Collective is a group of health literacy experts, communicators and healthcare strategists. Get in touch to discuss how we can help you look at your organisation’s approach to health literacy and help you produce better health information.