| Literature DB >> 28161750 |
Linda Amundstuen Reppe1,2,3, Olav Spigset4,5, Jens Peter Kampmann6, Per Damkier7, Hanne Rolighed Christensen6, Ylva Böttiger8, Jan Schjøtt9,10,11.
Abstract
PURPOSE: The aim of this study was to identify structure and language elements affecting the quality of responses from Scandinavian drug information centres (DICs).Entities:
Keywords: Drug information services; Health care; Information literacy; Quality assurance
Mesh:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28161750 PMCID: PMC5384946 DOI: 10.1007/s00228-017-2209-3
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Eur J Clin Pharmacol ISSN: 0031-6970 Impact factor: 2.953
Criteria used to describe the quality of structure and language elements of written responses from Scandinavian drug information centres (DICs) to six fictitious queries (six queries were sent to each of seven different DICs)
| Criteria no. | Criteria | Mean score (min to max) | Median score (0–4) | Comment |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Does the response have a distinct structure? | 3.1 (2 to 4) | 3 | The purpose of the structure is to help the reader get an overview, sort information and point out the more important parts of the response. The use of e.g. captions and paragraphs will help the reader to sort out information. |
| 2 | Are words and concepts used in the query, also repeated in the response? | 2.5 (1 to 4) | 3 | The use of similar words and concepts in the response, as in the query, will lead to continuity and consistency. The repetition and explanation will increase the likelihood that the writer and the reader understand each other. |
| 3 | Are words and concepts explained or defined? Are other words used to explain them? | 2.5 (1 to 4) | 3 | |
| 4 | Is the response written in an abstract or concrete style? | 2.4 (1 to 3) | 2.5 | Very compressed texts may be more difficult to read and understand, and the use of words to make the text less compressed is preferred. One fact should be presented at a time. The use of active (“we assume this is caused by”) instead of passive (“it is assumed that this is caused by”) formulations is also preferred. This does not mean one have to be personal in his style, but a direct tone will make it easier for the reader to know exactly what action he/she should take. |
| 5 | Does the use of pronouns, verbs and dependent clauses help making the text less compressed? | 2.5 (0 to 4) | 3 | |
| 6 | Is it easy for the reader to understand who should perform the described actions? | 2.4 (0 to 3) | 2 | |
| 7 | Are answers to the query given scattered or as one common conclusion? | 2.8 (1 to 4) | 3 | Is the query interpreted correctly, and all parts of the query responded to? It is crucial that the answer to the query is given in a conclusion. This is particularly important if the staff member has discussed several possible solutions and advice along the response. A conclusion in the end of a response has the benefits of summarizing the knowledge, and possibly, clarifying potential misunderstandings. |
| 8 | Is it easy to find a concrete answer to the query? | 2.9 (1 to 4) | 3 |
The quality criteria were developed by a plain language expert with a Master of Arts in Rhetoric and are based on plain language theory [14]. Each criterion was scored from 0 (poorest quality) to 4 (highest quality)
Examples of comments given by internal (clinical pharmacologists) and external (general practitioners) experts to assess the quality of 42 responses to drug-related queries (six fictitious queries posed to seven Scandinavian drug information centres (DICs)). Comments relating to all responses are named general comments. Comments relating to one specific response are named specific comments.
| Comments related to aspects increasing the quality of responses | Comments related to aspects decreasing the quality of responses | |
|---|---|---|
| Internal experts | • Enclosed articles should be “to the point”, highly relevant and not too demanding for the enquirer to read (expert E, general comment). | • Generally, I feel it is “bad service” to write very short and then refer to many enclosed articles in an un-prioritized order. Then the enquirer has to find the answer himself, especially when the enclosed articles have different conclusions (expert F, general comment). |
| External experts | • The response is concise. It does not contain unnecessary details, and is presented with a clear conclusion that is logical and practical and useful (expert A, specific comment). | • All responses conclude that the evidence is sparse, but not all of them dare to draw a useful conclusion, and that is what you are lacking as a physician, whom is supposed to use the answer. The physician has to make a decision (expert B, general comment). |
Characteristics increasing and decreasing the quality of responses from drug information centres (DICs)
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The characteristics are based on review of qualitative statements made by external (general practitioners) and internal (clinical pharmacologists) experts evaluating 42 responses to queries posed to seven Scandinavian drug information centres (DICs). Note that this is based on their individual comments, and that no consensus has been reached among the experts, concerning these characteristics