AI Article Synopsis

  • The study aims to evaluate the Uniformed Services Constipation Action Plan (USCAP) for managing functional constipation in children through an evidence-based and personalized approach, using pictograms for clarity.
  • The research involved validating pictograms and assessing parental perceptions, readability, and the suitability of the plan among parents, clinical librarians, and clinicians.
  • Results showed that USCAP met all criteria for effective communication and implementation, supporting its future use in treating chronic functional constipation in children.

Article Abstract

Objective: To assess the Uniformed Services Constipation Action Plan (USCAP) as an evidence-based, personalized, clinical action tool with pictograms to aid clinicians and families in the management of functional constipation.

Study Design: The USCAP facilitates the management functional constipation by using a health literacy-informed approach to provide instructions for pharmacotherapies and lifestyle modifications. This study included part 1 (pictogram validation) and part 2 (assessment). For part 1, pictogram transparency, translucency, and recall were assessed by parent survey (transparency ≥85%, mean translucency score ≥5, recall ≥85% required for validation). For part 2, the USCAP was assessed by parents, clinical librarians, and clinicians. Parental perceptions (n = 65) were assessed using the Consumer Information Rating Form (17 questions) to gauge comprehensibility, design quality and usefulness. Readability was assessed by 5 formulas and a Readability Composite Score was calculated. Clinical librarians (n = 3) used the Patient Education Materials Assessment Tool to measure understandability (19 questions) and actionability (7 questions) (>80% rating was acceptable). Suitability was assessed by clinicians (n = 34) using Doak's Suitability Assessment of Materials (superior ≥70% rating).

Results: All 12 pictograms demonstrated appropriate transparency, translucency, and recall. Parental perceptions reflected appropriate comprehensibility, design quality, and usefulness. The Readability Composite Score was consistent with a fifth-grade level. Clinical librarians reported acceptable understandability and actionability. Clinicians reported superior suitability.

Conclusions: The USCAP met all criteria for clinical implementation and future study of USCAP implementation for treating children with chronic functional constipation.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7557278PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.jpeds.2020.10.001DOI Listing

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