AI Article Synopsis

  • The Patient Education Materials Assessment Tool (PEMAT) was adapted to Japanese to assess how well patients can understand and act on health education materials.
  • Experts evaluated various healthcare materials for reliability, while laypeople reacted to high-scoring vs. low-scoring PEMAT materials regarding their understandability and ability to take action.
  • Results indicated that the Japanese version of PEMAT is reliable, and higher-rated materials significantly increased both understandability and self-efficacy among laypeople compared to lower-rated materials.

Article Abstract

Background: The Patient Education Materials Assessment Tool (PEMAT) systematically evaluates the understandability and actionability of patient education materials. This study aimed to develop a Japanese version of PEMAT and verify its reliability and validity.

Methods: After assessing content validation, experts scored healthcare-related leaflets and videos according to PEMAT to verify inter-rater reliability. In validation testing with laypeople, the high-scoring material group ( = 800) was presented with materials that received high ratings on PEMAT, and the low-scoring material group ( = 799) with materials that received low ratings. Both groups responded to the understandability and actionability of the materials and perceived self-efficacy for the recommended actions.

Results: The Japanese version of PEMAT showed strong inter-rater reliability (PEMAT-P: % agreement = 87.3, Gwet's AC1 = 0.83. PEMAT-A/V: % agreement = 85.7, Gwet's AC1 = 0.80). The high-scoring material group had significantly higher scores for understandability and actionability than the low-scoring material group (PEMAT-P: understandability 6.53 vs. 5.96, < 0.001; actionability 6.04 vs. 5.49, < 0.001; PEMAT-A/V: understandability 7.65 vs. 6.76, < 0.001; actionability 7.40 vs. 6.36, < 0.001). Perceived self-efficacy increased more in the high-scoring material group than in the low-scoring material group.

Conclusions: Our study showed that materials rated highly on Japanese version of PEMAT were also easy for laypeople to understand and action.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9739219PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/ijerph192315763DOI Listing

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