College of Health Sciences, Makerere University, Kampala, Uganda.
University of Oslo, Oslo, Norway.
Trials. 2020 Feb 14;21(1):187. doi: 10.1186/s13063-020-4093-x.
Earlier, we designed and evaluated an educational mass media intervention for improving people's ability to think more critically and to assess the trustworthiness of claims (assertions) about the benefits and harms (effects) of treatments. The overall aims of this follow-up study were to evaluate the impact of our intervention 1 year after it was administered, and to assess retention of learning and behaviour regarding claims about treatments.
We randomly allocated consenting parents to listen to either the Informed Health Choices podcast (intervention) or typical public service announcements about health issues (control) over 7-10 weeks. Each intervention episode explained how the trustworthiness of treatment claims can be assessed by using relevant key concepts of evidence-informed decision-making. Participants listened to two episodes per week, delivered by research assistants. We evaluated outcomes immediately, and a year after the intervention. Primary outcomes were mean score and the proportion with a score indicating a basic ability to apply the key concepts (> 11 out of 18 correct answers) on a tool measuring people's ability to critically appraise the trustworthiness of treatment claims. Skills decay/retention was estimated by calculating the relative difference between the follow-up and initial results in the intervention group, adjusting for chance. Statistical analyses were performed using R (R Core Team, Vienna, Austria; version 3.4.3).
After 1 year, the mean score for parents in the intervention group was 58.9% correct answers, compared to 52.6% in the control (adjusted mean difference of 6.7% (95% CI 3.3% to 10.1%)). In the intervention group, 47.2% of 267 parents had a score indicating a basic ability to assess treatment claims compared to 39.5% of 256 parents in the control (adjusted difference of 9.8% more parents (95% CI 0.9% to 18.9%). These represent relative reductions of 29% in the mean scores and 33% in the proportion of parents with a score indicating a basic ability to assess the trustworthiness of claims about treatment effects.
Although listening to the Informed Health Choices podcast initially led to a large improvement in the ability of parents to assess claims about the effects of treatments, our findings show that these skills decreased substantially over 1 year. More active practice could address the substantial skills decay observed over 1 year.
Pan African Clinical Trial Registry (www.pactr.org), PACTR201606001676150. Registered on 12 June 2016.
早前,我们设计并评估了一项教育大众媒体干预措施,以提高人们批判性思考和评估有关治疗益处和危害(效果)的主张(断言)可信度的能力。本随访研究的总体目标是评估我们的干预措施在实施 1 年后的影响,并评估有关治疗主张的学习和行为的保留情况。
我们随机分配同意的父母收听知情健康选择播客(干预组)或有关健康问题的典型公共服务公告(对照组),时间为 7-10 周。每个干预剧集都解释了如何通过使用循证决策的相关关键概念来评估治疗主张的可信度。研究助理每周为参与者播放两集。我们立即和干预后 1 年评估了结果。主要结局指标是工具测量的人们批判性评估治疗主张可信度的基本能力得分的平均值和比例(18 个正确答案中得 11 分以上),表明参与者能够应用关键概念。技能衰减/保留通过计算干预组中随访和初始结果之间的相对差异来估计,同时考虑机会因素。统计分析使用 R(奥地利维也纳的 R Core Team;版本 3.4.3)进行。
1 年后,干预组父母的平均得分为 58.9%正确答案,而对照组为 52.6%(调整后的平均差异为 6.7%(95%CI 3.3%至 10.1%))。在干预组中,267 名父母中有 47.2%的人得分表明他们有基本能力评估治疗主张,而对照组中 256 名父母中有 39.5%(调整后的差异为 9.8%,即更多的父母(95%CI 0.9%至 18.9%))。这分别代表平均分数的 29%和表示有基本能力评估治疗效果主张可信度的父母比例的 33%的相对降低。
尽管收听知情健康选择播客最初使父母评估治疗效果主张的能力有了很大提高,但我们的发现表明,这些技能在 1 年内大幅下降。更积极的实践可以解决 1 年内观察到的大量技能衰减问题。
泛非临床试验注册中心(www.pactr.org),PACTR201606001676150。于 2016 年 6 月 12 日注册。