The effectiveness of aphasia-friendly principles for printed health education materials for people with aphasia following stroke


Autoria(s): Rose, Tanya A.; Worrall, Linda E.; McKenna, Kryss T.
Contribuinte(s)

Chris Code

Robert Marshall

Data(s)

01/11/2003

Resumo

Background: Provision of health information to people with aphasia is inadequate. Current practice in providing printed health education materials to people with aphasia does not routinely take into consideration their language and associated reading difficulties. Aims: This study aimed to investigate if people with aphasia can comprehend health information contained in printed health education materials and if the application of aphasia-friendly principles is effective in assisting them to comprehend health information. It was hypothesised that participants with aphasia would comprehend significantly more information from aphasia-friendly materials than from existing materials. Other aims included investigating if the effectiveness of the aphasia-friendly principles is related to aphasia severity, if people with aphasia are more confident in responding to health information questions after they have read the aphasia-friendly material, if they prefer to read the aphasia-friendly brochures, and if they prefer to read the brochure type that resulted in the greatest increase in their knowledge. Methods & Procedures: Twelve participants with mild to moderately severe aphasia were matched according to their reading abilities. A pre and post experimental design was employed with repeated measures ANOVA (p

Identificador

http://espace.library.uq.edu.au/view/UQ:65473

Idioma(s)

eng

Publicador

Psychology Press

Palavras-Chave #Clinical Neurology #Written Information #Carers #Knowledge #Families #C1 #321025 Rehabilitation and Therapy - Hearing and Speech #730303 Occupational, speech and physiotherapy
Tipo

Journal Article