2012
DOI: 10.1007/s11606-012-2046-0
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Readability of Patient Education Materials Available at the Point of Care

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Cited by 194 publications
(156 citation statements)
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References 20 publications
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“…These are novel and significant contributions, as no previous work has systematically analysed the influence of the components in this study and we show that these greatly influence retrieval effectiveness and thus delivery of relevant and understandable health advice. [15,16,17,18], which is the level suggested by NIH for health information on the Web [19]. The distribution for HON is similar to that of the baseline used in this article (BM25).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 70%
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“…These are novel and significant contributions, as no previous work has systematically analysed the influence of the components in this study and we show that these greatly influence retrieval effectiveness and thus delivery of relevant and understandable health advice. [15,16,17,18], which is the level suggested by NIH for health information on the Web [19]. The distribution for HON is similar to that of the baseline used in this article (BM25).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 70%
“…For example, Becker reported that the majority of health Web sites are not well designed for the elderly [21], while Stossel et al found that health education material on the Web is not written at an adequate reading level [18]. Zheng and Yu have reported on the readability of electronic health records compared to Wikipedia pages related to diabetes and found that readability measures often do not align with user ratings of readability [22].…”
Section: Related Workmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…While readability scores do not assess the quality of a document's content, layout, or style, they do provide insight into how well textual information will be understood by the consumer (Redish, 2000). Smith, 1991;Ridpath, Greene, & Wiese, 2007;Rosales, 2010;Stossel, Gliatto, Fallar & Karani, 2012). These indices have been demonstrated to have good validity and have been extensively used in assessing the readability of health information (Freda, Damus & Merkatz, 1999;Friedman & Hoffman-Goetz, 2006;Kim et al, 2007;Meade & Smith, 1991).…”
Section: Readability Analysesmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The average score among all students across readability tests was a tenth grade reading level (range, grades 7-16). [25][26][27][28] On average, the written discharge instructions of students who completed the workshop before the OSCE were at a grade reading level of 9.9, versus 10.6 among those who completed it after the OSCE (effect size 0.7, p=0.01).…”
Section: Program Evaluationmentioning
confidence: 99%