4.6 Review

Readability of Written Materials for CKD Patients: A Systematic Review

期刊

AMERICAN JOURNAL OF KIDNEY DISEASES
卷 65, 期 6, 页码 842-850

出版社

W B SAUNDERS CO-ELSEVIER INC
DOI: 10.1053/j.ajkd.2014.11.025

关键词

Chronic kidney disease (CKD); renal disease; patient information materials; patient education; health literacy; self-care; self-management of health care; patient empowerment; shared decision making; reading comprehension; literacy level; medical terminology; readability; Lexile Analyzer; Flesch-Kincaid

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Background: The average patient has a literacy level of US grade 8 (age 13-14 years), but this may be lower for people with chronic kidney disease (CKD). Current guidelines suggest that patient education materials should be pitched at a literacy level of around 5th grade (age 10-11 years). This study aims to evaluate the readability of written materials targeted at patients with CKD. Study Design: Systematic review. Setting & Population: Patient information materials aimed at adults with CKD and written in English. Search Strategy & Sources: Patient education materials designed to be printed and read, sourced from practices in Australia and online at all known websites run by relevant international CKD organizations during March 2014. Analytical Approach: Quantitative analysis of readability using Lexile Analyzer and Flesch-Kincaid tools. Results: We analyzed 80 materials. Both Lexile Analyzer and Flesch-Kincaid analyses suggested that most materials required a minimum of grade 9 (age 14-15 years) schooling to read them. Only 5% of materials were pitched at the recommended level (grade 5). Limitations: Readability formulas have inherent limitations and do not account for visual information. We did not consider other media through which patients with CKD may access information. Although the study covered materials from the United States, United Kingdom, and Australia, all noninternet materials were sourced locally, and it is possible that some international paper-based materials were missed. Generalizability may be limited due to exclusion of non-English materials. Conclusions: These findings suggest that patient information materials aimed at patients with CKD are pitched above the average patient's literacy level. This issue is compounded by cognitive decline in patients with CKD, who may have lower literacy than the average patient. It suggests that information providers need to consider their audience more carefully when preparing patient information materials, including user testing with a low-literacy patient population. (C) 2015 by the National Kidney Foundation, Inc.

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