Transcript
Page 1: Designing Risk Communications (implications from Comprehension Tests)

Designing Risk Communications (implications from

Comprehension Tests)

Louis A. Morris, Ph.D.

Drug Information Association

June 15, 2004

Page 2: Designing Risk Communications (implications from Comprehension Tests)

Objectives• Review Information Processing Models

– Patients (novices)– Physicians (experts)

• Describe Models for Risk Communications– Pharmacokinetics of Information Processing

• Discuss Learnings from Comprehension Tests– Cognitive Load Problems– Signaling Problems

• Discuss Role of Readability & Comprehension Testing

General Conclusions, Not Specific Findings

Page 3: Designing Risk Communications (implications from Comprehension Tests)

Information Processing

InformationProcessing/

MemoryStimuli/Messages

Perceptual Buffer:

AttentionProcesses

DecisionsEnvironmental

Cues/Usage Needs

Page 4: Designing Risk Communications (implications from Comprehension Tests)

Implications

• What captures attention has best opportunity to be processed– Placement – top of document, beginning of

sentences– Graphics – Headers, bold, italics

• Weber’s Law

• Limited Capacity– We remember what is important --- depends on

how we will use data

Page 5: Designing Risk Communications (implications from Comprehension Tests)

Cognitive Processes• Decoding and interpreting words

– Lexical Processing

• Extracting meaning within and among sentences – Syntactical Processing

• Discerning overall theme– Discourse Processing

• Meaning is Constructed – Like a house is built– More resources needed to build foundation, less

available for other sections

Constructing a Schema

Page 6: Designing Risk Communications (implications from Comprehension Tests)

Tell Me What this Says?

• The black and white cow walked over to the purple esuoh and smiled broadly to give the namow a liap of milk that she made into a nollag of French vanilla ice cream to sell to the srotisiv.

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Implications

• Simple words • Short Sentences

• However:– Short words may not be simple

• Concept is difficult and may need explanation

– Some large words help organization– Sing-Song sentences are a turn-off

Readability Formula

Page 8: Designing Risk Communications (implications from Comprehension Tests)
Page 9: Designing Risk Communications (implications from Comprehension Tests)

Types of Processing

• Top-Down – experts (physicians)– Start with Existing schema and modify

– More efficient – preferred mode of processing

– Information stresses differences

• Bottom-Up – novices (patients)– Provide building blocks, simplify information

– Reduce cognitive load, provide signals

– Provide “intellectual scaffold” (organization) for new information

Page 10: Designing Risk Communications (implications from Comprehension Tests)

Principle of “Cognitive Conservation”

• People have limited cognitive resources– Limited Capacity Working Memory

• We can think about 7 +/- 2 bits

– Distribute “Cognitive Resources"• Based on our goals

• What is the “Cognitive Load” – How much information to process– How difficult is the information to process

Interaction of Materials’ “load and structure” with Patient’s Information Processing Skills and Motivations

Page 11: Designing Risk Communications (implications from Comprehension Tests)

Cognitive Load

Signals Ability

Opportunity

Motivation InvolvementGoals

SituationalConstraints

Literacy Self-Efficacy

PatientDocument

Willingness to Process

Actual Processing

Pharmacokinetic Communications Model

Morris & Aiken

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Ability

• Literacy– NALS: five literacy levels, 40% of US @ 1 or 2– Level 1:

• 25% immigrants• 33% elderly (65 yrs. or older)• 25% physical or mental problem

• Self-efficacy– If people do not expect to be able to perform, they

won’t try– Self-efficacy judgments may not be based on sufficient

information

Page 13: Designing Risk Communications (implications from Comprehension Tests)

Risk Communication Options• HCPs

– PI, Label Changes (black box), Dear Doctor letters, Advertisements (affirmative disclosure, separate campaign)

• Patients – PPI, Medication Guides, Informed Consent, Agreement– Educational Campaigns

• Public (PR)– FDA public announcements (talk papers, press

releases), website posting, advisory committee meetings

Vary in Format and Cognitive Load

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Comprehension Tests

• Started with OTC Drugs– Advil/Nuprin – “LL” vs. “CS” Label– Nicotine Products– Common for Switches

• Applied to Medication Guides– Other risk management documents

• Applied to Physician Labels

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General Procedure

• Recruit (n= 400 to 1,200)– Use Shopping Malls– Screen for at-risk population

• Disease characteristics

• Low Literacy (pronunciation tests)

• Design– One Cell Survey– Multi-Cell Comparisons

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General Procedure (2)• Procedure

– Screening– Document Exposure – read as normally would

• Interviewer Leaves Room

• Questionnaire– Develop Communication Objectives– Funnel Approach

– Open ends– Specific Communication Objectives– Follow-up Questions

– Document usually present (may be taken away for initial open ends)

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MGs vs. OTC Labels• Longer

– Cognitive constraints on information processing– Limited “take away,” “time to interpret”

• More difficult words/concepts– Needs explanation to understand consequences

• More Complex Directions – Application to variety of usage situations

• Risk Topics – warnings, contraindications, side effects list

• Associated Documents– Agreements, wallet cards, consent, audiovisual

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Comprehension Test Findings

• Cognitive Load - Longer documents– Primary Points fully communicated (extensive

repetition) (over 90% correct)– Secondary Points poorly communicated (66%-75%

correct)– Evidence Participants adopt a “harm prevention bias ”

– consult physician in response to any issue, regardless on information in the material.

• Do not attempt to consult document to answer questions – Questions requiring multiple mental operations are very

difficult (more than three items to consider leads to very poor results)

Tradeoffs- Explanation vs. Length

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Lessons from Comp. Tests (1)

• Simplification– Avoid Extensive Repetition –

• Use brief headers in “most important section”

– Avoid “Seductive Details”• “Interesting to know” information detracts from key

messages

– Use “Communications Objectives” to focus messages

– Cut out extra words

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Lessons form Comp. Tests (2)

• Signals– Less likely to notice information in:

• second half of a long sentence,

• middle of a paragraph,

• not graphically emphasized

– Graphic emphasis works surprisingly well for OTC, not for MGs

• too much “background noise” – reduce number of sub-heads

– Simplifying language and concepts • very often necessary but often requires much background

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Lessons from Comp. Tests (3)

• Context Matters– Vague words decrease comprehension

• “do not drink alcohol”• Health, sickness, etc., has unclear meaning

• Credibility and Persuasion Needed– To influence behavior, need to go beyond

comprehension– Rationale for advocated behaviors may be

needed

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Is Readability Testing Enough?

• Can help simplify information– Does not address overall length and cognitive

burdens due to overall flow– Does not address simple words that are difficult

to interpret (red meat, healthy, sick)

• Question of Predictive Validity– Do readability tests accurately predict reading

level– Tests developed in late 1940’s

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Conclusions

• MGs (and other documents) are here– FDA required for drugs with risk management problems.

• Affirmative Approach (ie, write your own)– Bring FDA own designed/tested

• Readability can help simplify, Comprehension Testing is defensible– Comprehension tests for liability defense

• Plan Testing Prior to Implementation– Changing document after use can imply weaknesses in

prior document


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