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整形手术中使用的患者报告结局量表的可读性

Readability of Patient-reported Outcome Measures Used in Plastic Surgery.

作者信息

Zamore Zachary, Azad Chao Long, Zhu Lily, Lowe Chenery, Giladi Aviram M

机构信息

From the The Curtis National Hand Center, MedStar Union Memorial Hospital, Baltimore, MD.

Department of Plastic and Reconstructive Surgery, Johns Hopkins Medicine, Baltimore, MD.

出版信息

Plast Reconstr Surg Glob Open. 2024 Dec 20;12(12):e6351. doi: 10.1097/GOX.0000000000006351. eCollection 2024 Dec.

Abstract

BACKGROUND

Patient-reported outcomes are essential to understanding success in plastic surgery procedures, many that aim to improve quality of life. Patient-reported outcome measures (PROMs) should be written at or below the sixth-grade reading level recommended by the American Medical Association. This study aimed to evaluate the readability of plastic surgery PROMs.

METHODS

We conducted a literature review to identify validated, commonly used PROMs in plastic surgery. We extracted PROMs' text and instructions and analyzed readability using different approaches that estimate the grade level required to understand. Our primary outcome was the Simple Measure of Gobbledygook (SMOG) index, which detects word complexity and expects 100% comprehension at the grade level rating assigned. We also included the Flesch-Kincaid grade level, Coleman-Liau index, and automated readability index.

RESULTS

Forty-three PROMs met the inclusion criteria. The mean SMOG index was 8.2 (SD = 1.3), indicating an eighth-grade reading level. Mean reading grade levels measured by the Flesch-Kincaid grade level, Coleman-Liau index, and automated readability index ranged from third to sixth grade, although these may underestimate readability difficulties. Only 6 (14%) PROMs had a SMOG index at or below the sixth-grade level. PROM instructions had significantly higher reading levels than the questions/responses for all readability indexes ( < 0.01).

CONCLUSIONS

PROMs used in plastic surgery, including the instructions, exceed the reading level recommended by the American Medical Association. This may limit comprehension and accurate completion and compromise validity and reliability. PROMs should be written and designed to be accessible to patients of all literacy levels.

摘要

背景

患者报告的结果对于理解整形手术的成功至关重要,许多整形手术旨在改善生活质量。患者报告的结果测量指标(PROMs)应以美国医学协会推荐的六年级及以下阅读水平编写。本研究旨在评估整形手术PROMs的可读性。

方法

我们进行了一项文献综述,以确定整形手术中经过验证的常用PROMs。我们提取了PROMs的文本和说明,并使用不同的方法分析可读性,这些方法估计理解所需的年级水平。我们的主要结果是简化的难词测量指标(SMOG)指数,该指数检测单词复杂性,并期望在指定的年级水平评级上达到100%的理解率。我们还纳入了弗莱施-金凯德年级水平、科尔曼-廖指数和自动可读性指数。

结果

43个PROMs符合纳入标准。平均SMOG指数为8.2(标准差=1.3),表明为八年级阅读水平。通过弗莱施-金凯德年级水平、科尔曼-廖指数和自动可读性指数测量的平均阅读年级水平范围为三年级至六年级,尽管这些可能低估了阅读难度。只有6个(14%)PROMs的SMOG指数在六年级及以下水平。对于所有可读性指数,PROM说明的阅读水平显著高于问题/回答(<0.01)。

结论

整形手术中使用的PROMs,包括说明,超过了美国医学协会推荐的阅读水平。这可能会限制理解和准确完成,并损害有效性和可靠性。PROMs的编写和设计应使所有识字水平的患者都能理解。

https://cdn.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/blobs/c5f8/11661722/239db369463b/gox-12-e6351-g001.jpg

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