Understanding Cochrane Systematic Reviews Clinical Trial
Official title:
Presenting Summary Information From Cochrane Systematic Reviews: Randomized Controlled Trial of Infographics Presentation vs. Standard Word Summaries
Verified date | June 2019 |
Source | University Hospital of Split |
Contact | n/a |
Is FDA regulated | No |
Health authority | |
Study type | Interventional |
The objective of the investigators study is to evaluate the efficacy of infographics in presenting information, in terms of understanding and remembering research results, compared to standard PLS formats and scientific summary formats (SciSum).
Status | Completed |
Enrollment | 171 |
Est. completion date | October 2016 |
Est. primary completion date | October 2016 |
Accepts healthy volunteers | Accepts Healthy Volunteers |
Gender | All |
Age group | N/A and older |
Eligibility |
Inclusion Criteria: - Eligible participants will be first-year university students without experience with Cochrane review summaries, because prior familiarization with Cochrane summaries could make information uptake easier by those participants. Exclusion criteria: - Participants who give the positive answer to the survey question about familiarity with the Cochrane will be excluded from the study analysis. |
Country | Name | City | State |
---|---|---|---|
Croatia | School of Medicine | Split |
Lead Sponsor | Collaborator |
---|---|
University Hospital of Split | Croatian Science Foundation |
Croatia,
Type | Measure | Description | Time frame | Safety issue |
---|---|---|---|---|
Primary | Understanding | The primary outcome of the study is the score on a understanding test with ten questions about information contained in all three forms of presentation, titled as "Understanding information about external cephalic version for breech presentation before term" (Hutton et al, 2015). The questions will focus on understanding the benefits and risks of the intervention and the quality of evidence described in the systematic review. Each correctly answered question will be awarded one point, with a maximum of 10 points. The scale was specifically designed for this research, they ask about the information contained in all three abstract format and all questions are open-ended. | One-hour after the intervention | |
Secondary | Reading Experience | This section of the survey will include 5 questions about the experience of participants about the text they read, measured on a 10-point Likert type scale, where 1 means do not agree at all and 10 means fully agree. The total score is the sum of scores on all five answers (minimum score was 10 and maximum 50). Higher scores indicate greater reading experience, which means that a person was assessed that type of reading material as more enjoyable. So, higher scores are associated with more positive reading experience. | One hour after the intervention | |
Secondary | Accessibility of Relevant Information | This section of the survey will have 5 questions concerning how easy it was for the participant to find relevant information, measured by a 10-point Likert type scale where the answer 1 means I do not agree at all and 10 means I fully agree. The total score is the sum of scores on all the answers (minimum score was 5, maximum 50). The higher score indicated that the reading material was perceived as more user friendly and that it was easier to find the desired information. | One hour after the intervention | |
Secondary | Health Numeracy Score | This section will use 6-item General health numeracy test (Osborne et al., 2013) in order to determine how much our participants understand the basic health instructions regarding numeracy dimension. For each correct answer, the participants receive one point and the total score is the sum of all correct answers. | One hour after the intervention |