| Literature DB >> 24551322 |
Adriana Arcia1, Michael E Bales2, William Brown2, Manuel C Co1, Melinda Gilmore2, Young Ji Lee1, Chin S Park1, Jennifer Prey2, Mark Velez2, Janet Woollen2, Sunmoo Yoon1, Rita Kukafka3, Jacqueline A Merrill4, Suzanne Bakken4.
Abstract
Many Americans are challenged by the tasks of understanding and acting upon their own health data. Low levels of health literacy contribute to poor comprehension and undermine the confidence necessary for health self-management. Visualizations are useful for minimizing comprehension gaps when communicating complex quantitative information. The process of developing visualizations that accommodate the needs of individuals with varying levels of health literacy remains undefined. In this paper we provide detailed descriptions of a) an iterative methodological approach to the development of visualizations, b) the resulting types of visualizations and examples thereof, and c) the types of data the visualizations will be used to convey. We briefly describe subsequent phases in which the visualizations will be tested and refined. Web deployment of the final visualizations will support the ethical obligation to return the data to the research participants and community that contributed it.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2013 PMID: 24551322 PMCID: PMC3900122
Source DB: PubMed Journal: AMIA Annu Symp Proc ISSN: 1559-4076