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Patient Education: Are We Getting the Message Across?
Naveen K. Ahuja, MD Ian C. Hoppe, BA Mark S. Granick, MD, FACS Department of Surgery, Division of Plastic Surgery New Jersey Medical School – UMDNJ Newark, NJ, USA
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Disclosure The authors have nothing to disclose
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Objective The objective of this study was to evaluate readily available on-line patient education information for readability. This information will aid plastic surgeons in appropriately educating their patients.
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Background The National Institutes of Health suggests educational information be at the 4th-6th grade reading level to maximize comprehension. Source: “How to Write Easy-to-Read Health Materials”. Aug Sept
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Methods Text regarding procedure information for patients was extracted from the American Society for Plastic Surgery’s website and from the American Society for Aesthetic Plastic Surgery’s website.
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Methods Three objective and validated methods (Flesch-Kincaid, SMOG, and Dale-Chall) were used to assess readability of each procedure’s text.
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Methods Each method uses slightly different methodology
FK uses weighted factors combined with word length and sentence length SMOG uses a ratio of words with 3 or more syllables to the number of sentences with a validated formula D-C uses a combination of average sentence length in conjunction with a percentage of words not in a predetermined list of 3,000 commonly used words
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Results
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Results
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Conclusions Materials on the ASPS website significantly exceeded suggested reading levels Materials on the ASAPS website significantly exceeded suggested reading levels
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Significance Readily available online plastic surgery educational material is at a level of readability that is substantially higher than the national average; additionally, these materials are at a higher level than recommended by the NIH.
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