| Literature DB >> 34629971 |
Nandita S Mani1, Terri Ottosen2, Megan Fratta3, Fei Yu4.
Abstract
OBJECTIVE: The COVID-19 pandemic highlights the public's need for quality health information that is understandable. This study aimed to identify (1) the extent to which COVID-19 messaging by state public health departments is understandable, actionable, and clear; (2) whether materials produced by public health departments are easily readable; (3) relationships between material type and understandability, actionability, clarity, and reading grade level; and (4) potential strategies to improve public health messaging around COVID-19.Entities:
Keywords: COVID-19; communication; consumers; health communication; health education; health information; health literacy; infodemic; information design; public health; state health department
Mesh:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34629971 PMCID: PMC8485956 DOI: 10.5195/jmla.2021.1165
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Med Libr Assoc ISSN: 1536-5050
Understandability, actionability, communication clarity, and readability of public materials by the Dept. of Health of 10 US state governments
| Health Literacy Tool | # Materials | Mean (SD) | Median (IQR) | Minimum | Maximum |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| PEMAT-P Understandability | 38 | 88.18% (±18.16%) | 94% (±14.75%) | 21% | 100% |
| PEMAT-P Actionability | 38 | 87.26% (±14.51%) | 83% (±20%) | 40% | 100% |
| PEMAT-A/V Understandability | 4 | 93.25% (±13.50%) | 100% (±20.25%) | 73% | 100% |
| PEMAT-A/V Actionability | 4 | 100% with (±0%) | 100% (±0%) | 100% | 100% |
| PEMAT-All Understandability | 42 | 88.67% (±17.69%) | 94% (±14.75%) | 21% | 100% |
| PEMAT-All Actionability | 42 | 88.48% (±14.30%) | 100% (±20.25%) | 40% | 100% |
| Index-Full | 19 | 73.57 (±14.22) | 73.7 (±11.6) | 50 | 100 |
| Index-Mod | 23 | 82.23 (±10.74) | 81.8 (±15.90) | 58.3 | 100 |
| Index-All | 42 | 78.32 (±13.03) | 78.35 (±17.27) | 50 | 100 |
| FKGL | 34 | 7.11 (±2.60) | 7.30 (±3.5) | 1.7 | 12.5 |
Figure 1Distribution of materials by understandability assessment using PEMAT. A score of 70% or above is considered highly understandable, and a score below 70% indicates poor understandability
Figure 2Distribution of materials upon actionability assessment using PEMAT. A score of 70% or above is considered highly actionable, and a score below 70% indicates poor understandability
Figure 3Clarity of communication materials as assessed by the Index. A score above 90% is considered passing or “easy to read”
Figure 4Distribution of materials by readability assessment using FKGL. Materials with a FKGL at or below the sixth-grade level are easy to read, seventh- to ninth-grade level are of average difficulty, and tenth-grade or higher are difficult to read