| Literature DB >> 27542995 |
Angela M Barbara1, Maureen Dobbins, R Brian Haynes, Alfonso Iorio, John N Lavis, Anthony J Levinson.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Evidence summaries and blogs can support evidence-informed healthy aging, by presenting high-quality health research evidence in plain language for a nonprofessional (citizen) audience.Entities:
Keywords: Web-based health information; aging; consumer health information; knowledge translation; usability testing
Year: 2016 PMID: 27542995 PMCID: PMC5010647 DOI: 10.2196/humanfactors.6208
Source DB: PubMed Journal: JMIR Hum Factors ISSN: 2292-9495
Figure 1Evidence summary on the McMaster Optimal Aging Portal.
Figure 2Blog post on the McMaster Optimal Aging Portal.
Sample of evidence summaries and blog posts reviewed.
| Content type | Health area | Title |
| Exercise | Yoga reduces pain and disability at up to 1 year in people with low back pain | |
| Memory and cognition | Tests detect dementia in older people; cognitive stimulation or some drugs may slightly improve cognitive function | |
| Heart disease | Multiple lifestyle changes in people with established coronary heart disease reduce the risk for cardiovascular events | |
| Health information technology | Computer-delivered interventions have a small effect on knowledge and some health behaviors | |
| Testing and treatment decisions | Unnecessary medication use in frail older adults can be reduced through team-based care, providing education to providers and reviewing prescribing practices | |
| Psychological and mental health | Meaningful social roles may improve health and well-being for people in retirement | |
| Exercise | How fast should I walk to cross the road safely? Fast facts about walking speed | |
| Nutrition | Does salt really affect blood pressure? | |
| Memory and cognition | Treating behavioral problems of dementia: when confusion leads to controversy | |
| Social health | Loneliness hurts. How to recognize loneliness as a health concern | |
| Sleep disorders | Sleep and aging: how many zzz's are optimal to stay healthy? | |
Participant demographic characteristics.
| Group | Study ID | Age | Gender | Employment status | Health status | Education |
| I-01 | 62 | Female | Retired | Healthy | Some post-graduate | |
| I-02 | 66 | Female | Retired | One or more health conditions | Some college/university | |
| I-03 | 66 | Female | Retired | One or more health conditions | Some college/university | |
| I-04 | 70 | Male | Retired | One or more health conditions | Post-graduate | |
| I-05 | 74 | Male | Retired | One or more health conditions | Some college/university | |
| I-06 | 76 | Female | Retired | Healthy | College/university | |
| I-07 | 79 | Male | Retired | One or more health conditions | Post-graduate | |
| I-08 | 80 | Female | Retired | One or more health conditions | College/university | |
| I-09 | 81 | Female | Retired | One or more health conditions | College/university | |
| I-10 | 82 | Male | Retired | One or more health conditions | Post-graduate | |
| I-11 | 84 | Male | Retired | One or more health conditions | Some college/university | |
| I-12 | 84 | Male | Retired | One or more health conditions | Post-graduate | |
| A-13 | 23 | Female | Part-time work, part-time student | Healthy | College/university | |
| A-14 | 48 | Female | Full-time work | Healthy | Post-graduate | |
| A-15 | 55 | Female | Retired | Healthy | College/university | |
| A-16 | 59 | Female | Full-time work | Healthy | College/university | |
| A-17 | 60 | Female | Part-time work | Healthy | High school | |
| A-18 | 60 | Male | Retired | One or more health conditions | Post-graduate | |
| A-19 | 67 | Female | Retired | One or more health conditions | College/university | |
| A-20 | 67 | Female | Retired | Healthy | College/university | |
| A-21 | 70 | Female | Retired | Healthy | Post-graduate | |
| A-22 | 75 | Female | Retired | Healthy | College/university | |
Findings, organized into 4 aspects of the user experience, themes, and subthemes.
| User experience element and explanation | Theme |
| Desirability: users feel the product is worth having and have a positive emotional response to it | Personal relevance |
| Understandability: users comprehend both what kind of product it is and its content | Language comprehension; |
| Usability: users can use the product easily, effectively, and with satisfaction | Volume of information; |
| Usefulness: users find the product has practical value | Intention to use the information; |