Ó Doinn Tiarnán, Broderick James M, Clarke Rebecca, Hogan Niall
Department of Trauma and Orthopaedic Surgery, St. James's Hospital, Dublin, Ireland.
Orthop J Sports Med. 2022 May 6;10(5):23259671221092356. doi: 10.1177/23259671221092356. eCollection 2022 May.
The internet has become an increasingly popular resource among sports medicine patients seeking injury-related information. Numerous organizations recommend that patient educational materials (PEMs) should not exceed sixth-grade reading level. Despite this, studies have consistently shown the reading grade level (RGL) of PEMs to be too demanding across a range of surgical specialties.
To determine the readability of online sports medicine PEMs.
Cross-sectional study.
The readability of 363 articles pertaining to sports medicine from 5 leading North American websites was assessed using 8 readability formulas: Flesch-Kincaid Reading Grade Level, Flesch Reading Ease Score, Raygor Estimate, Fry Readability Formula, Simple Measure of Gobbledygook, Coleman-Liau Index, FORCAST Readability Formula, and Gunning Fog Index. The mean RGL of each article was compared with the sixth- and eighth-grade reading level in the United States. The cumulative mean website RGL was also compared among individual websites.
The overall cumulative mean RGL was 12.2 (range, 7.0-17.7). No article (0%) was written at a sixth-grade reading level, and only 3 articles (0.8%) were written at or below the eighth-grade reading level. The overall cumulative mean RGL was significantly higher than the sixth-grade [95% CI for the difference, 6.0-6.5; < .001] and eighth-grade (95% CI, 4.0-4.5; < .001) reading levels. There was a significant difference among the cumulative mean RGLs of the 5 websites assessed.
Sports medicine PEMs produced by leading North American specialty websites have readability scores that are above the recommended levels. Given the increasing preference of patients for online health care materials, the imperative role of health literacy in patient outcomes, and the growing body of online resources, significant work needs to be undertaken to improve the readability of these materials.
互联网已成为寻求损伤相关信息的运动医学患者越来越常用的资源。众多组织建议患者教育材料(PEMs)不应超过六年级阅读水平。尽管如此,研究一直表明,在一系列外科专业中,PEMs的阅读年级水平(RGL)要求过高。
确定在线运动医学PEMs的可读性。
横断面研究。
使用8种可读性公式评估了来自北美5个主要网站的363篇运动医学相关文章的可读性:弗莱什-金凯德阅读年级水平、弗莱什阅读简易度得分、雷戈尔估计法、弗莱可读性公式、费解度简易测量法、科尔曼-廖指数、FORCAST可读性公式和冈宁雾指数。将每篇文章的平均RGL与美国六年级和八年级阅读水平进行比较。还比较了各网站的累计平均网站RGL。
总体累计平均RGL为12.2(范围为7.0-17.7)。没有文章(0%)是按照六年级阅读水平撰写的,只有3篇文章(0.8%)是按照八年级或以下阅读水平撰写的。总体累计平均RGL显著高于六年级(差异的95%CI,6.0-6.5;P<.001)和八年级(95%CI,4.0-4.5;P<.001)阅读水平。在所评估的5个网站的累计平均RGL之间存在显著差异。
北美领先专业网站制作的运动医学PEMs的可读性得分高于推荐水平。鉴于患者对在线医疗材料的偏好日益增加、健康素养在患者治疗结果中的重要作用以及在线资源的不断增加,需要开展大量工作来提高这些材料的可读性。