Literature DB >> 33656446

Effects of Information Architecture on the Effectiveness and User Experience of Web-Based Patient Education in Middle-Aged and Older Adults: Online Randomized Experiment.

Tessa Dekkers1,2, Marijke Melles1, Stephan B W Vehmeijer3, Huib de Ridder1.   

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Web-based patient education is increasingly offered to improve patients' ability to learn, remember, and apply health information. Efficient organization, display, and structural design, that is, information architecture (IA), can support patients' ability to independently use web-based patient education. However, the role of IA in the context of web-based patient education has not been examined systematically.
OBJECTIVE: To support intervention designers in making informed choices that enhance patients' learning, this paper describes a randomized experiment on the effects of IA on the effectiveness, use, and user experience of a patient education website and examines the theoretical mechanisms that explain these effects.
METHODS: Middle-aged and older adults with self-reported hip or knee joint complaints were recruited to use and evaluate 1 of 3 patient education websites containing information on total joint replacement surgery. Each website contained the same textual content based on an existing leaflet but differed in the employed IA design (tunnel, hierarchical, or matrix design). Participants rated the websites on satisfaction, engagement, control, relevance, trust, and novelty and completed an objective knowledge test. Analyses of variance and structural equation modeling were used to examine the effects of IA and construct a theoretical model.
RESULTS: We included 215 participants in our analysis. IA did not affect knowledge gain (P=.36) or overall satisfaction (P=.07) directly. However, tunnel (mean 3.22, SD 0.67) and matrix (mean 3.17, SD 0.69) architectures were found to provide more emotional support compared with hierarchical architectures (mean 2.86, SD 0.60; P=.002). Furthermore, increased perceptions of personal relevance in the tunnel IA (β=.18) were found to improve satisfaction (β=.17) indirectly. Increased perceptions of active control in the matrix IA (β=.11) also improved satisfaction (β=.27) indirectly. The final model of the IA effects explained 74.3% of the variance in satisfaction and 6.8% of the variance in knowledge and achieved excellent fit (χ217,215=14.7; P=.62; root mean square error of approximation=0.000; 95% CI [0.000-0.053]; comparative fit index=1.00; standardized root mean square residual=0.044).
CONCLUSIONS: IA has small but notable effects on users' experiences with web-based health education interventions. Web-based patient education designers can employ tunnel IA designs to guide users through sequentially ordered content or matrix IA to offer users more control over navigation. Both improve user satisfaction by increasing user perceptions of relevance (tunnel) and active control (matrix). Although additional research is needed, hierarchical IA designs are currently not recommended, as hierarchical content is perceived as less supportive, engaging, and relevant, which may diminish the use and, in turn, the effect of the educational intervention. ©Tessa Dekkers, Marijke Melles, Stephan B W Vehmeijer, Huib de Ridder. Originally published in the Journal of Medical Internet Research (http://www.jmir.org), 03.03.2021.

Entities:  

Keywords:  aged; computer-assisted instruction; health education; humans; internet; middle aged; mobile phone; models, theoretical; patient education as topic; total joint replacement; user-centered design; user-computer interface

Mesh:

Year:  2021        PMID: 33656446      PMCID: PMC7970227          DOI: 10.2196/15846

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Med Internet Res        ISSN: 1438-8871            Impact factor:   5.428


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