TY - JOUR
T1 - Public reporting of hospital infection rates
T2 - Ranking the states on credibility and user friendliness
AU - Amini, Ava
AU - Birnbaum, David W.
AU - Black, Bernard
AU - Hyman, David A.
N1 - Copyright:
Copyright 2019 Elsevier B.V., All rights reserved.
PY - 2013
Y1 - 2013
N2 - Health-care associated infections ('HAIs') kill about 100,000 people annually; most are preventable, but many hospitals have not aggressively addressed the problem. In response, twenty-five states and the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services require public reporting of hospital infection rates for at least some types of infections, and other states and private entities are implementing such reporting. The websites and related reports vary widely in ease of access, ease of use, usefulness of information, timeliness of updates, and credibility. We report on work in progress, in which we assess the quality and suitability of different state websites and reports for different target audiences (ordinary consumers; physicians, and infection control professionals) and the extent to which they meet best practices for online communication, including Stanford's 'Fogg' Guidelines for Web Credibility and user-friendliness metrics developed by other researchers. We find wide variation in quality, and substantial correlation between measures of website credibility and user-friendliness. We identify ways to improve usability, usefulness, and tailoring for information to different target audiences. Our analysis suggests that the 'one website (and report format) fits all users' model may not work well in delivering complex, technical information to users with widely varying needs and sophistication..
AB - Health-care associated infections ('HAIs') kill about 100,000 people annually; most are preventable, but many hospitals have not aggressively addressed the problem. In response, twenty-five states and the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services require public reporting of hospital infection rates for at least some types of infections, and other states and private entities are implementing such reporting. The websites and related reports vary widely in ease of access, ease of use, usefulness of information, timeliness of updates, and credibility. We report on work in progress, in which we assess the quality and suitability of different state websites and reports for different target audiences (ordinary consumers; physicians, and infection control professionals) and the extent to which they meet best practices for online communication, including Stanford's 'Fogg' Guidelines for Web Credibility and user-friendliness metrics developed by other researchers. We find wide variation in quality, and substantial correlation between measures of website credibility and user-friendliness. We identify ways to improve usability, usefulness, and tailoring for information to different target audiences. Our analysis suggests that the 'one website (and report format) fits all users' model may not work well in delivering complex, technical information to users with widely varying needs and sophistication..
KW - health-care associated infections
KW - health-care public reporting
KW - health-care quality
KW - performance measurement
KW - website usability
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U2 - 10.3233/978-1-61499-203-5-87
DO - 10.3233/978-1-61499-203-5-87
M3 - Article
C2 - 23388261
AN - SCOPUS:84880151461
SN - 0926-9630
VL - 183
SP - 87
EP - 92
JO - Studies in health technology and informatics
JF - Studies in health technology and informatics
ER -