Abstract
This study examines the accessibility and mobile readiness of 25 of the top health information website homepages using mobile-readiness heuristics and an accessibility analysis based on a combination of automated and manual inspection of the website code. The paper also explores whether there might be a relationship between an organization meeting accessibility guidelines and an organization making its site mobile-ready and whether there is a difference between government and non-government website digital inclusiveness. The findings revealed that the overwhelming majority of the sites were at least partially mobile-ready, reformatting for a mobile screen, but that many of the sites violated critical accessibility guidelines. While non-government sites tended to be somewhat more mobile -ready, government sites were more likely to perform well when it came to accessibility testing. The results question whether health information providers are putting a higher priority on mobile-readiness than on accessibility to users with disabilities
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