Department of Public Health, William Paterson University, Wayne, NJ.
Department of Mathematics, Lehman College, The City University of New York, Bronx, NY.
Am J Infect Control. 2019 Nov;47(11):1298-1301. doi: 10.1016/j.ajic.2019.04.178. Epub 2019 Jun 26.
Influenza (flu) is pervasive and burdensome. The purpose of this study was to determine the readability levels of online articles related to flu.
Using the search term "influenza," the URL's of the first 100 English language Web sites were vetted for content to ascertain that the article met inclusion criteria. Five recommended readability tests were conducted using an online service to calculate readability. Overall, the analysis indicates that flu material found on the web is not being written at a level that is widely readable.
None of the 100 sites included in the analysis received an acceptable score on all 5 assessments. One-sample independent t tests (α = 0.05, df = 99) indicated that it is highly unlikely that flu Web sites are being written at the desirable level. Of the 100 sampled sites, 33 had a .com, 29 had a .org, and 22 had a .gov extension. Extension type did not play a role in readability level of these sites.
When creating content for the masses, health professionals should maximize their efforts by testing the readability as well as other factors that influence the likelihood that it will be understood.
流感(flu)普遍存在且负担沉重。本研究旨在确定与流感相关的在线文章的可读性水平。
使用搜索词“influenza”,筛选前 100 个英语网络站点的 URL 以获取内容,以确定文章符合纳入标准。使用在线服务进行了五项推荐的可读性测试,以计算可读性。总体而言,分析表明,网络上的流感材料并非以广泛可读的水平编写。
在分析中纳入的 100 个站点中,没有一个在所有 5 项评估中都获得可接受的分数。单样本独立 t 检验(α=0.05,df=99)表明,流感网站的编写水平极不可能达到理想水平。在 100 个抽样网站中,有 33 个是.com,29 个是.org,22 个是.gov 扩展名。扩展名类型对这些网站的可读性水平没有影响。
当为大众创作内容时,卫生专业人员应通过测试可读性以及影响理解可能性的其他因素,尽最大努力。