Abstract

Purpose: The primary aim of this study was to investigate the effectiveness of actively distributing auditory rehabilitation materials through digital channels, with a focus on quantifying overall reach and qualifying user experience. The secondary aim was to assess users' experience and satisfaction with each platform. Method: A retrospective analysis of website traffic to two digital properties: (a) a blog where readers may comment on articles (with active distribution through social media) and (b) a static website with no comment function (with passive organic distribution) from March 2017 to October 2018 was performed. Two key metrics were analyzed across these pages: users and pageviews. Results: The blog received 48.4% more users and 97.0% more pageviews than the static website over the entire 20-month study period. Users were significantly more satisfied with the ease of finding the information and its quality via the blog. Conclusions: We conclude that social media–focused active distribution was indeed effective because it resulted in more total traffic, a greater number of users, more frequent access, and an overall high level of satisfaction with the quality of information and resources. This may have useful implications for improving the distribution of educational health care resources through digital channels.

Highlights

  • The primary aim of this study was to investigate the effectiveness of actively distributing auditory rehabilitation materials through digital channels, with a focus on quantifying overall reach and qualifying user experience

  • A retrospective analysis of website traffic to two digital properties: (a) a blog where readers may comment on articles and (b) a static website with no comment function from March 2017 to October 2018 was performed

  • We conclude that social media–focused active distribution was effective because it resulted in more total traffic, a greater number of users, more frequent access, and an overall high level of satisfaction with the quality of information and resources

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Summary

Introduction

The primary aim of this study was to investigate the effectiveness of actively distributing auditory rehabilitation materials through digital channels, with a focus on quantifying overall reach and qualifying user experience. Conclusions: We conclude that social media–focused active distribution was effective because it resulted in more total traffic, a greater number of users, more frequent access, and an overall high level of satisfaction with the quality of information and resources. This may have useful implications for improving the distribution of educational health care resources through digital channels. Digital resources hosted on a webpage that no one visits are akin to print materials sitting on the shelf in a warehouse

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