CELLS - Centre for Ethics and Law in the Life Sciences/Hannover Medical School, Institute for History, Ethics and Philosophy of Medicine, Carl-Neuberg-Str, 1, 30625 Hannover, Germany.
BMC Health Serv Res. 2013 Oct 10;13:405. doi: 10.1186/1472-6963-13-405.
Evidence-based information is a precondition for informed decision-making and participation in health. There are several recommendations and definitions available on the generation and assessment of so called evidence-based health information for patients and consumers (EBHI). They stress the importance of objectively informing people about benefits and harms and any uncertainties in health-related procedures. There are also studies on the comprehensibility, relevance and user-friendliness of these informational materials. But to date there has been little research on the perceptions and cognitive reactions of users or lay people towards EBHI. The aim of our study is to define the spectrum of consumers' reaction patterns to written EBHI in order to gain a deeper understanding of their comprehension and assumptions, as well as their informational needs and expectations.
This study is based on an external user evaluation of EBHI produced by the German Institute for Quality and Efficiency in Health Care (IQWiG), commissioned by the IQWiG. The EBHI were examined within guided group discussions, carried out with lay people. The test readers' first impressions and their appraisal of the informational content, presentation, structure, comprehensibility and effect were gathered. Then a qualitative text analysis of 25 discussion transcripts involving 94 test readers was performed.
Based on the qualitative text analysis a framework for reaction patterns was developed, comprising eight main categories: (i) interest, (ii) satisfaction, (iii) reassurance and trust, (iv) activation, (v) disinterest, (vi) dissatisfaction and disappointment, (vii) anxiety and worry, (viii) doubt.
Many lay people are unfamiliar with core characteristics of this special information type. Two particularly critical issues are the description of insufficient evidence and the attendant absence of clear-cut recommendations. Further research is needed to examine strategies to explain the specific character of EBHI so as to minimize unintended or adverse reaction patterns. The presented framework describes the spectrum of users' reaction patterns to EBHI. It may support existing best practice models for editing EBHI.
循证信息是做出明智决策和参与健康的前提条件。针对患者和消费者(EBHI)生成和评估所谓的循证健康信息,已经有多项建议和定义。这些建议和定义强调客观告知人们健康相关程序的益处、危害和任何不确定性的重要性。也有关于这些信息材料的可理解性、相关性和用户友好性的研究。但迄今为止,对于用户或非专业人士对 EBHI 的看法和认知反应的研究甚少。我们的研究旨在确定消费者对书面 EBHI 的反应模式的范围,以便更深入地了解他们的理解和假设,以及他们的信息需求和期望。
这项研究基于德国医疗保健质量和效率研究所(IQWiG)受 IQWiG 委托对 EBHI 进行的外部用户评估。通过引导性小组讨论对 EBHI 进行了检查,这些讨论是与非专业人士一起进行的。收集了测试读者的第一印象以及他们对信息内容、呈现方式、结构、可理解性和效果的评价。然后对 25 份涉及 94 名测试读者的讨论记录进行了定性文本分析。
基于定性文本分析,开发了一个反应模式框架,包括八个主要类别:(i)兴趣,(ii)满意,(iii)安心和信任,(iv)激活,(v)不感兴趣,(vi)不满和失望,(vii)焦虑和担忧,(viii)怀疑。
许多非专业人士不熟悉这种特殊信息类型的核心特征。两个特别关键的问题是对证据不足的描述和随之而来的缺乏明确建议。需要进一步研究以检查解释 EBHI 特殊性质的策略,以最大限度地减少意外或不良的反应模式。所提出的框架描述了用户对 EBHI 的反应模式的范围。它可以支持现有的 EBHI 编辑最佳实践模型。