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A Linguistic Analysis of Health Literacy Demands of Chronic Kidney Disease Patient Education Materials

BACKGROUND: Instruments to assess the quality and comprehensibility of printed patient education materials may lack proper consideration of how readers derive meaning from text. The Evaluative Linguistic Framework (ELF) considers how factors that influence readers' expectations about health car...

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Autores principales: Morony, Suzanne, Webster, Angela C., Buchbinder, Rachelle, Kirkendall, Suzanne, McCaffery, Kirsten J., Clerehan, Rosemary
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: SLACK Incorporated 2018
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6608909/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/31294272
http://dx.doi.org/10.3928/24748307-20171227-01
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author Morony, Suzanne
Webster, Angela C.
Buchbinder, Rachelle
Kirkendall, Suzanne
McCaffery, Kirsten J.
Clerehan, Rosemary
author_facet Morony, Suzanne
Webster, Angela C.
Buchbinder, Rachelle
Kirkendall, Suzanne
McCaffery, Kirsten J.
Clerehan, Rosemary
author_sort Morony, Suzanne
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: Instruments to assess the quality and comprehensibility of printed patient education materials may lack proper consideration of how readers derive meaning from text. The Evaluative Linguistic Framework (ELF) considers how factors that influence readers' expectations about health care texts also affect their ability to understand them. The ELF has demonstrated value in improving the quality of patient materials about medication, consent, and self-reported questionnaires, but has not yet been used to evaluate a corpus of patient education materials about chronic disease self-management. OBJECTIVE: This study sought to apply the ELF to examine specific elements of printed self-management patient education materials for chronic kidney disease (CKD) not captured by other tools. METHODS: From a previously published systematic review, we identified 14 patient education materials (eight self-management, six diet and nutrition) for people with CKD. We used the ELF to identify the different ways the text could be structured, its intended purpose, the relationship established between reader and writer, presence of signposting, its complexity and technicality of language, and factual content. KEY RESULTS: Our analysis identified nine possible structural units, of which “introducing the problem” and “instructing the reader to self-manage” were common to all materials. However, there was no consistency or common sequence to these units of text. The intended readership and aims of the author(s) were not always clear; many materials made assumptions about what the reader knew, the language was often complex and dense, and the meta-discourse was sometimes distracting. CONCLUSIONS: Our analysis suggests CKD document developers can benefit from a theoretically grounded linguistic tool that focuses on the intended audience and their specific needs. The ELF identified structural units of text, aligned with rhetorical elements that can be uniformly applied for developing self-management education materials for CKD, and provided checks for language complexity. Further work can determine its usefulness for other (e.g., electronic) formats and other chronic diseases. [HLRP: Health Literacy Research and Practice. 2018;2(1):e1–e14.] PLAIN LANGUAGE SUMMARY: Helping patients make meaning from information about their condition is a key goal of health care organizations. We analyzed chronic kidney disease patient education materials on self-management using the Evaluative Linguistic Framework. The purpose and intended audience were frequently unclear. We identified nine structural units of text that may assist information providers to plan and structure content.
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spelling pubmed-66089092019-07-10 A Linguistic Analysis of Health Literacy Demands of Chronic Kidney Disease Patient Education Materials Morony, Suzanne Webster, Angela C. Buchbinder, Rachelle Kirkendall, Suzanne McCaffery, Kirsten J. Clerehan, Rosemary Health Lit Res Pract Original Research-Qualitative BACKGROUND: Instruments to assess the quality and comprehensibility of printed patient education materials may lack proper consideration of how readers derive meaning from text. The Evaluative Linguistic Framework (ELF) considers how factors that influence readers' expectations about health care texts also affect their ability to understand them. The ELF has demonstrated value in improving the quality of patient materials about medication, consent, and self-reported questionnaires, but has not yet been used to evaluate a corpus of patient education materials about chronic disease self-management. OBJECTIVE: This study sought to apply the ELF to examine specific elements of printed self-management patient education materials for chronic kidney disease (CKD) not captured by other tools. METHODS: From a previously published systematic review, we identified 14 patient education materials (eight self-management, six diet and nutrition) for people with CKD. We used the ELF to identify the different ways the text could be structured, its intended purpose, the relationship established between reader and writer, presence of signposting, its complexity and technicality of language, and factual content. KEY RESULTS: Our analysis identified nine possible structural units, of which “introducing the problem” and “instructing the reader to self-manage” were common to all materials. However, there was no consistency or common sequence to these units of text. The intended readership and aims of the author(s) were not always clear; many materials made assumptions about what the reader knew, the language was often complex and dense, and the meta-discourse was sometimes distracting. CONCLUSIONS: Our analysis suggests CKD document developers can benefit from a theoretically grounded linguistic tool that focuses on the intended audience and their specific needs. The ELF identified structural units of text, aligned with rhetorical elements that can be uniformly applied for developing self-management education materials for CKD, and provided checks for language complexity. Further work can determine its usefulness for other (e.g., electronic) formats and other chronic diseases. [HLRP: Health Literacy Research and Practice. 2018;2(1):e1–e14.] PLAIN LANGUAGE SUMMARY: Helping patients make meaning from information about their condition is a key goal of health care organizations. We analyzed chronic kidney disease patient education materials on self-management using the Evaluative Linguistic Framework. The purpose and intended audience were frequently unclear. We identified nine structural units of text that may assist information providers to plan and structure content. SLACK Incorporated 2018-01-23 /pmc/articles/PMC6608909/ /pubmed/31294272 http://dx.doi.org/10.3928/24748307-20171227-01 Text en © 2018 Morony, Webster, Buchbinder, et al. This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0). This license allows users to copy and distribute, to remix, transform, and build upon the article, for any purpose, even commercially, provided the author is attributed and is not represented as endorsing the use made of the work.
spellingShingle Original Research-Qualitative
Morony, Suzanne
Webster, Angela C.
Buchbinder, Rachelle
Kirkendall, Suzanne
McCaffery, Kirsten J.
Clerehan, Rosemary
A Linguistic Analysis of Health Literacy Demands of Chronic Kidney Disease Patient Education Materials
title A Linguistic Analysis of Health Literacy Demands of Chronic Kidney Disease Patient Education Materials
title_full A Linguistic Analysis of Health Literacy Demands of Chronic Kidney Disease Patient Education Materials
title_fullStr A Linguistic Analysis of Health Literacy Demands of Chronic Kidney Disease Patient Education Materials
title_full_unstemmed A Linguistic Analysis of Health Literacy Demands of Chronic Kidney Disease Patient Education Materials
title_short A Linguistic Analysis of Health Literacy Demands of Chronic Kidney Disease Patient Education Materials
title_sort linguistic analysis of health literacy demands of chronic kidney disease patient education materials
topic Original Research-Qualitative
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6608909/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/31294272
http://dx.doi.org/10.3928/24748307-20171227-01
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