Comparison of Neurological Healthcare Oriented Educational Resources for Patients on the Internet.
Publication/Presentation Date
12-1-2014
Abstract
The internet has become a major contributor to health literacy promotion. The average American reads at 7th-8th grade level and it is recommended to write patient education materials at or below 6th grade reading level. We tried to assess the level of literacy required to read and understand online patient education materials (OPEM) for neurological diseases from various internet resources. We then compared those to an assumed reference OPEM source, namely the patient education brochures from the American Academy of Neurology (AAN), the world's largest professional association of neurologists. Disease specific patient education brochures were downloaded from the AAN website. OPEM for these diseases were also accessed from other common online sources determined using a predefined criterion. All OPEM were converted to Microsoft Word (Microsoft Corp., Redmond, WA, USA) and their reading level was analyzed using Readability Studio Professional Edition version 2012.1 (Oleander Software, Vandalia, OH, USA). Descriptive analysis and analysis of variance were used to compare reading levels of OPEM from different resources. Medline Plus, Mayo clinic and Wikipedia qualified for OPEM analysis. All OPEM from these resources, including the AAN, were written above the recommended 6th grade reading level. They were also found to be "fairly difficult", "difficult" or "confusing" on the Flesch Reading Ease scale. AAN OPEM on average needed lower reading level, with Wikipedia OPEM being significantly (p
Volume
21
Issue
12
First Page
2179
Last Page
2183
ISSN
1532-2653
Published In/Presented At
PUNIA, V; et al. Comparison of neurological healthcare oriented educational resources for patients on the internet. Journal Of Clinical Neuroscience: Official Journal Of The Neurosurgical Society Of Australasia. Scotland, 21, 12, 2179-2183, Dec. 2014. ISSN: 1532-2653.
Disciplines
Medical Sciences | Medicine and Health Sciences | Neurology
PubMedID
25194822
Department(s)
Department of Medicine
Document Type
Article