Preference for and understanding of graphs presenting health risk information. The role of age, health literacy, numeracy and graph literacy.

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Sydney Health Literacy Lab, School of Public Health, Faculty of Medicine and Health, University of Sydney, 2006, Australia; Department of Family Medicine, CAPHRI School for Public Health and Primary Care, Maastricht University Medical Centre, Maastricht, the Netherlands. Electronic address:

Published: January 2021

Objective: To investigate 1) younger (< 65) and older (> 65) adults' preference for and understanding of graph formats presenting risk information, and 2) the contribution of age, health literacy, numeracy and graph literacy in understanding information.

Materials And Methods: To assess preferences, participants (n = 219 < 65 and n = 227>65) were exposed to a storyboard presenting six types of graphs. Understanding (verbatim and gist knowledge) was assessed in an experiment using a 6 (graphs: clock, bar, sparkplug, table, pie vs pictograph) by 2 (age: younger [<65] vs older [>65]) between-subjects design.

Results: Most participants preferred clock, pie or bar chart. Pie was not well understood by both younger and older people, and clock not by older people. Bar was fairly well understood in both groups. Table yielded high knowledge scores, particularly in the older group. Lower age, higher numeracy and higher graph literacy contributed to higher verbatim knowledge scores. Higher health literacy and graph literacy were associated with higher gist knowledge.

Discussion And Conclusion: Although not the preferred format, tables are best understood by older adults.

Practice Implications: Graph literacy skills are essential for both verbatim and gist understanding, and are important to take into account when developing risk information.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.pec.2020.06.031DOI Listing

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