Abstract

Abstract Rationale: Breast cancer diagnosis at a young age is associated with higher risk of recurrence, mortality, morbidity, and impact on quality of life. Long-term effects of treatment may include early menopause, fertility impairment, neuropathy, cardiovascular disease, lowered bone density, and risk of second malignancies. Young women with or at-risk for breast cancer often seek health information through mainstream print and digital media. However, they often find it does not address their unique concerns, is difficult to interpret, or even misleading. Media reports of breast cancer research are often unreliable, misleading, or confusing regarding which information is clinically relevant. Young women with or at-risk for breast cancer, need accurate, clearly presented information based on sound evidence to help them make informed decisions about their specific health needs. To help women better understand media coverage about new research, Facing Our Risk of Cancer Empowered (FORCE) developed the CDC-funded XRAYS (eXamining Relevance of Articles to Young Survivors) program. XRAYS is an online resource that provides brief articles summarizing recent research relevant to young women with or at-risk for breast cancer. XRAYS articles rate the quality and relevance of research, the quality of media reporting, and suggest questions users may be useful to address with health care providers. One critical aim of XRAYS is to improve users’ understanding of the information presented in media reports related to breast cancer. Objective: The objective of this study was to assess whether XRAYS improves readers’ knowledge about information presented in media reports relevant to breast cancer more than reading media reports alone. Methods: To assess XRAYS’ impact on users’ knowledge of information presented in media reports, an evaluator conducted a study with 36 volunteer participants who were attending a FORCE conference. Participants were randomly assigned to treatment or control groups. Both groups completed pre-test paper and pencil multiple choice assessments of knowledge regarding information presented in the article they read, in order to assess baseline knowledge. Then, the treatment group read a media report and the corresponding XRAYS article and the control group read only the media report. After reading the materials, participants answered the same paper and pencil multiple choice questions, so that changes in knowledge could be assessed. Results: A between groups t-test indicated that the groups had comparable baseline knowledge about the material they were assigned to read. A within group comparison showed that the control group’s knowledge did not significantly change between pre- and post-test, while the XRAYS group’s knowledge increased significantly (t(18)=-2.67, p<.05). A between group comparison of change scores showed that the treatment group’s change was significantly greater than the control group’s (t(34)=-3.01, p<.01). The table shows results of the between group comparison of knowledge change. (t(34)=-3.01, p<.01). The table shows results of the between group comparison of knowledge change.GroupNMean Change Score (s.d.)t-score (d.f.)PComparison Group17-16.47 (35.52)-3.01 (34)<.01XRAYS1918.95 (34.94) Conclusion: Results indicate that XRAYS is effective in supporting users in learning more factual content from media reports on cancer research than people who read media reports alone, and that it may be useful to develop similar resources to meet other audiences’ needs for information about cancer research. Citation Format: Robin Hilary Pugh Yi, Piri Welcsch, Lisa Rezende, Craig Dearfield, Kelly Owens, Susan J. Friedman. Effectiveness of an online educational resource in increasing lay users' understanding of information in media reports on breast cancer research [abstract]. In: Proceedings of the 2019 San Antonio Breast Cancer Symposium; 2019 Dec 10-14; San Antonio, TX. Philadelphia (PA): AACR; Cancer Res 2020;80(4 Suppl):Abstract nr P1-15-07.

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