SUPPORTING STATEMENT
Part B
Development of a Health Information Rating System (HIRS)
September 18, 2012
Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality (AHRQ)
Table of Contents
B. Collections of Information Employing Statistical Methods 3
1. Respondent universe and sampling methods 3
2. Information Collection Procedures 3
3. Methods to Maximize Response Rates 5
4. Tests of Procedures 5
5. Statistical Consultants 5
The study will involve primary data collection from consumer testing interviews with 48 adult consumers. The respondent universe is the U.S. adult population. We will use a non-probability, convenience sampling method to identify 48 English-speaking consumers with a high school diploma or less education. Recruitment efforts will ensure that at least half of the consumers do not have a high school diploma. If we are unable to recruit sufficient low literacy consumers through the recruitment database, we will recruit at adult basic education centers. It should also be noted that 44% of adults with a high school diploma or GED have limited health literacy according to the National Assessment of Adult Literacy. Our sampling strategy will yield a set of consumers who will be sensitive to differences in materials’ understandability and actionability. We will exclude consumers if they, or someone they care for, have received the procedure (i.e., colonoscopy), or have the condition or used the treatment (i.e., asthma or used an inhaler) presented in the selected health education materials. To identify and recruit consumers, we will engage a Boston area agency to identify individuals who meet the aforementioned criteria. The agency can recruit consumers from their database of individuals who have not participated in research before or those who have not participated in a research study in the past 6 months. The agency will assess the candidate consumers on the screening criteria: English-speaking, high school diploma or less education, and they, or someone they care for, have not received a colonoscopy, or have asthma or used an inhaler. The first 48 consumers who meet the selection criteria and are able to participate during the scheduled times will be the individuals who participate in consumer testing. No claim is made that the results from this study will be generalizable.
A total of 12 different health education materials will be used in consumer testing . The materials include different modalities (i.e., printable and audiovisual) and 2 health topics (colonoscopy and inhaler use). There are 6 materials for each topic. Materials for each modality and topic have received different HIRS rating levels for understandability and actionability. The selected set of materials includes both understandable and poorly understandable materials, actionable and poorly actionable materials, and just poorly understandable materials. This variation on quality will allow us to assess each domain both independently and collectively.
Each consumer will be randomly assigned 1 of the 6 materials on each of the 2 topics. This means that each consumer will be randomly assigned one of the “colonoscopy” materials and one of the “inhaler use/asthma” materials, which vary in quality on understandability and actionability, and represent different modalities of materials. This will allow us to compare the consumer testing results between materials that vary in quality for each domain to assess the construct validity of the HIRS, and help us determine how to revise and improve the HIRS.
Exhibit 1 lists the materials (hypertext includes links to the web-based educational materials), the type of materials, the HIRS understandability ratings, and the HIRS actionability ratings.
Exhibit 1. Health Education Materials for Consumer Testing
Material |
Modality |
Understandability |
Actionability |
Topic 1: Asthma/Inhaler Use |
|
|
|
How to Use an Inhaler, by the Utah Dept Health Asthma Program |
Audiovisual |
Understandable |
Actionable |
Asthma Triggers, by Children’s Healthcare of Atlanta |
Audiovisual |
Understandable |
Poorly Actionable |
Asthma Inhaler Medication Technique - How to Take An Asthma Inhaler, by America's Allergist |
Audiovisual |
Poorly Understandable |
N/A |
Asthma: How to Use A Metered Dose Inhaler, by FamilyDoctor.org |
Printable |
Understandable |
Actionable |
How to use an inhaler - no spacer, by MedlinePlus |
Printable |
Understandable |
Poorly Actionable |
Inhaled Asthma Medications: Tips to Remember, by the American Academy of Allergy Asthma & Immunology |
Printable |
Poorly Understandable |
N/A |
Topic 2: Colonoscopy |
|
|
|
Colonoscopy Patient Education Video, by Krames |
Audiovisual |
Understandable |
Actionable |
Colorectal Cancer Awareness by St. Vincent’s Healthcare |
Audiovisual |
Understandable |
Poorly Actionable |
Prepare for a colonoscopy, by U. of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center |
Audiovisual |
Poorly Understandable |
N/A |
Getting Ready for your Colonoscopy, by West Chester Endoscopy Suite |
Printable |
Understandable |
Actionable |
Colonoscopy, by National Digestive Diseases Information Clearinghouse (NDDIC) |
Printable |
Understandable |
Poorly Actionable |
Colonoscopy, by the American College of Surgeons Division of Education
|
Printable |
Poorly Understandable |
N/A |
Prior to the testing we will obtain informed consent (see Attachment H), collect demographic information (see Attachment C), and administer the English version of the Short Test of Functional Health Literacy in Adults (S-TOFHLA) to determine each consumer’s health literacy skill level (see Attachment D).
To begin the testing, the consumer will first read or watch each randomly assigned material. Then an interviewer will ask the consumer a set of questions for each topic to assess his/her understanding of each material’s content (understandability), and the extent to which he/she knows what actions to take or how to act (actionability), if applicable. The pre-selected materials are publicly available on-line. The materials (with hyperlinks) are provided with the type of material they are, their understandability rating, actionability rating (if applicable), and with the associated health education material questionnaire for that topic. Attachments E and F have the list of pre-selected materials and the associated questionnaires for each.
Since this is a non-probability sample, we do not have a target response rate. However, we will aim to maximize participation of consumers who meet the selection criteria. We will facilitate recruitment by providing an honorarium commensurate with the time requested of participants (i.e., $75 for 1.2 hours). To ensure effective identification and recruitment of the desired sample, we will hire a Boston-based firm to recruit the participants, as describe in section B.1 above.
To test the consumer testing procedures, the interviewers will do a dry run of the protocol. To further test the procedures, the protocols were reviewed by cognitive testing experts and an expert in health literacy and patient education with experience conducting similar assessments.
Abt Associates is the contractor that will conduct the data collection and analysis for AHRQ. The professionals from Abt Associates have over 40 years of experience providing high quality, timely and cost effective surveys for federal, state, local, and private clients. Dr. K.P. Srinath at Abt Associates was the statistician consulted for this data collection effort; his contact email is [email protected] and telephone (301) 634-1836. Dr. Michael S. Wolf of Northwestern University, and Allyson Ross Davies of ARD consulting were also consulted. The key contact at Abt is Sarah Shoemaker; her information is below.
Sarah J. Shoemaker, Pharm.D., Ph.D.
Abt Associates, Inc.
55 Wheeler Street
Cambridge, MA 02138
Phone: (617) 349-2472
File Type | application/msword |
File Title | SUPPORTING STATEMENT |
Author | wcarroll |
Last Modified By | DHHS |
File Modified | 2013-01-17 |
File Created | 2013-01-17 |