학술논문

The effect of numeracy on the comprehension of information about medicines in users of a patient information website.
Document Type
Academic Journal
Source
Patient Education & Counseling (PATIENT EDUC COUNS), Jun2011; 83(3): 398-403. (6p)
Subject
Language
English
ISSN
0738-3991
Abstract
OBJECTIVE: To investigate the relationship between numeracy and the accuracy of side effect risk estimation following the presentation of information about a medicine via the Cancer Research UK (CR-UK) patient information website. METHODS: 591 website users were presented with information in different formats about the risks of side effects from taking tamoxifen. Participants estimated the risk of each side effect, provided other subjective ratings about the information and completed a numeracy task. RESULTS: Regardless of presentation format, numeracy was correlated with the accuracy of three side effect risk estimates. People with cancer and tamoxifen users showed stronger correlations for all side effect estimates. In addition, numeracy was positively related to the perceived influence of the information on the decision to take the medicine and was negatively related to ratings of satisfaction with the information. CONCLUSION: People with a lower numeracy level make larger errors in interpreting medicines side effect risk information. PRACTICE IMPLICATIONS: Pharmacists, other health professionals and patient information websites should ensure they provide clear explanations of risk, particularly to people with low numeracy, and assess their understanding of those explanations. Future research into risk communication should take account of numeracy level, to investigate the impact of different formats.