| Literature DB >> 33032599 |
Genie Han1,2, Musa Mayer3, Joseph Canner4, Kristina Lindsley5, Reva Datar6, Jimmy Le7, Annette Bar-Cohen8, Janice Bowie7, Kay Dickersin7.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Evidence-based healthcare (EBHC) principles are essential knowledge for patient and consumer ("consumer") engagement as research and research implementation stakeholders. The aim of this study was to assess whether participation in a free, self-paced online course affects confidence in explaining EBHC topics. The course comprises six modules and evaluations which together take about 6 h to complete.Entities:
Keywords: Consumer education; Consumer health information; Distance education; Online learning; Patient education
Mesh:
Year: 2020 PMID: 33032599 PMCID: PMC7542874 DOI: 10.1186/s12913-020-05759-5
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Health Serv Res ISSN: 1472-6963 Impact factor: 2.655
Fig. 1Numbers of participants in Understanding EBHC between May 31, 2007 and December 31, 2018. aTermed “course completers”
Participant characteristics, from “Before you begin” evaluation
| Completed | Completed | Did not complete | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| No. | (%)c | No. | (%) | No. | (%) | |
| Total respondents | 11,522 | (100.0) | 4899 | (100.0) | 6623 | (100.0) |
| Aged | ||||||
| Under 20 | 150 | (1.3) | 36 | (0.7) | 114 | (1.7) |
| 20–29 | 3869 | (33.6) | 1788 | (36.5) | 2081 | (31.4) |
| 30–39 | 3059 | (26.6) | 1308 | (26.7) | 1751 | (26.4) |
| 40–49 | 2163 | (18.8) | 927 | (18.9) | 1236 | (18.7) |
| 50–59 | 1583 | (13.7) | 601 | (12.3) | 982 | (14.8) |
| ≥ 60 | 571 | (5.0) | 190 | (3.9) | 381 | (5.8) |
| Prefer not to answer or no response | 127 | (1.1) | 49 | (1.0) | 78 | (1.2) |
| Sex/gender | ||||||
| Female | 8672 | (75.3) | 3927 | (80.2) | 4745 | (71.6) |
| Male | 2563 | (22.2) | 870 | (17.8) | 1693 | (25.6) |
| Prefer not to answer or no response | 287 | (2.5) | 102 | (2.1) | 185 | (2.8) |
| Race/ethnic origine | ||||||
| African American/Black | 1007 | (8.7) | 454 | (9.3) | 553 | (8.3) |
| American Indian or Alaskan Native | 35 | (0.3) | 14 | (0.3) | 21 | (0.3) |
| Asian or Pacific Islander | 805 | (7.0) | 261 | (5.3) | 544 | (8.2) |
| Caucasian/White | 6706 | (58.2) | 2806 | (57.3) | 3900 | (58.9) |
| Indian/Pakistani | 477 | (4.1) | 116 | (2.4) | 361 | (5.5) |
| Latino, Latina/Hispanic | 1361 | (11.8) | 891 | (18.2) | 470 | (7.1) |
| Middle Easterner | 366 | (3.2) | 78 | (1.6) | 288 | (4.3) |
| Other | 196 | (1.7) | 60 | (1.2) | 136 | (2.1) |
| Prefer not to answer or no response | 569 | (4.9) | 219 | (4.5) | 350 | (5.3) |
| Highest level of education completed | ||||||
| Some high school, high school diploma, or equivalent | 350 | (3.0) | 119 | (2.4) | 231 | (3.5) |
| Some college (no degree) | 982 | (8.5) | 473 | (9.7) | 509 | (7.7) |
| Trade/technical school | 77 | (0.7) | 27 | (0.6) | 50 | (0.8) |
| Associate degree | 1209 | (10.5) | 778 | (15.9) | 431 | (6.5) |
| Bachelor’s degree or higher (eg, doctorate) | 8687 | (75.4) | 3434 | (70.1) | 5253 | (79.3) |
| Prefer not to answer or no response | 217 | (1.9) | 68 | (1.4) | 149 | (2.2) |
| Employment status | ||||||
| Employed for an income | 7671 | (66.6) | 3366 | (68.7) | 4305 | (65.0) |
| Working as a volunteer | 160 | (1.4) | 56 | (1.1) | 104 | (1.6) |
| Not employed or not working | 2039 | (17.7) | 833 | (17.0) | 1206 | (18.2) |
| Other | 1214 | (10.5) | 490 | (10.0) | 724 | (10.9) |
| Prefer not to answer or no response | 438 | (3.8) | 154 | (3.1) | 284 | (4.3) |
| Reason for taking the course | ||||||
| Training | 846 | (7.3) | 272 | (5.6) | 574 | (8.7) |
| Education | 6412 | (55.7) | 3782 | (77.2) | 2630 | (39.7) |
| Personal growth | 3451 | (30.0) | 584 | (11.9) | 2867 | (43.3) |
| Other or none of the above | 679 | (5.9) | 197 | (0.4) | 482 | (7.3) |
| Not reported | 134 | (1.2) | 64 | (1.3) | 70 | (1.1) |
a Completed both “Before” and “After” evaluations (“course completers”)
b Completed “Before” evaluation, but not “After” evaluation (“course non-completers”)
c Columns may not total 100% because of rounding
d All differences in participant characteristics between course completers and course non-completers were found to be significant (p < 0.001)
e Race and ethnic origin were grouped together in a single question
Mean confidence levelsa and mean within-person change observed by topic on “Before” and “After” evaluations
Confidence levels on EBHC from “Before” to “After” evaluations
| In terms of your knowledge on evidence-based healthcare, what is your confidence? | “After” confidence of course completers | Total | ||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Not so confident | Moderately confident | Very confident | ||||||
| No. | (%) | No. | (%) | No. | (%) | No. | (%) | |
| Not so confident | 81 | (5.7) | 1134 | (80.5) | 194 | (13.8) | 1409 | (100) |
| Moderately confident | 42 | (1.4) | 2051 | (67.2) | 961 | (31.5) | 3054 | (100) |
| Very confident | 2 | (0.6) | 125 | (35.1) | 229 | (64.3) | 356 | (100) |
| 125 | (2.6) | 3310 | (68.7) | 1384 | (28.7) | 4819d | (100) | |
a Data presented as paired observations
b This question did not offer a “Prefer not to respond” answer choice
c Changes from “Before” to “After” were found to be significant (p < 0.0001)
d Although the online hosting platform prompted participants to answer all evaluation questions before proceeding, we encountered 80 missing responses