miércoles, 17 de septiembre de 2014

Development of the Patient Education Mate... [Patient Educ Couns. 2014] - PubMed - NCBI

Development of the Patient Education Mate... [Patient Educ Couns. 2014] - PubMed - NCBI



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 2014 Sep;96(3):395-403. doi: 10.1016/j.pec.2014.05.027. Epub 2014 Jun 12.

Development of the Patient Education Materials Assessment Tool (PEMAT): A new measure of understandability and actionability for print and audiovisual patient information.

Abstract

OBJECTIVE:

To develop a reliable and valid instrument to assess the understandability and actionability of print and audiovisual materials.

METHODS:

We compiled items from existing instruments/guides that the expert panel assessed for face/content validity. We completed four rounds of reliability testing, and produced evidence of construct validity with consumers and readability assessments.

RESULTS:

The experts deemed the PEMAT items face/content valid. Four rounds of reliability testing and refinement were conducted using raters untrained on the PEMAT. Agreement improved across rounds. The final PEMAT showed moderate agreement per Kappa (Average K=0.57) and strong agreement per Gwet's AC1 (Average=0.74). Internal consistency was strong (α=0.71; Average Item-Total Correlation=0.62). For construct validation with consumers (n=47), we found significant differences between actionable and poorly-actionable materials in comprehension scores (76% vs. 63%, p<0.05) and ratings (8.9 vs. 7.7, p<0.05). For understandability, there was a significant difference for only one of two topics on consumer numeric scores. For actionability, there were significant positive correlations between PEMAT scores and consumer-testing results, but no relationship for understandability. There were, however, strong, negative correlations between grade-level and both consumer-testing results and PEMAT scores.

CONCLUSIONS:

The PEMAT demonstrated strong internal consistency, reliability, and evidence of construct validity.

PRACTICE IMPLICATIONS:

The PEMAT can help professionals judge the quality of materials (available at: http://www.ahrq.gov/pemat).
Copyright © 2014 Elsevier Ireland Ltd. All rights reserved.

KEYWORDS:

Assessment; Audiovisual materials; Clear communication; Educational materials; Health literacy; Instrument development; Measurement; Patienteducation; Plain language; Readability

PMID:
 
24973195
 
[PubMed - in process]

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