The evaluation of pharmaceutical pictograms in a low-literate South African population

An inability to read and understand written medication instructions may be a major contributory factor to non-compliance in certain patient populations, particularly in countries with a high illiteracy rate such as South Africa. Twenty three pictograms from the USP-DI and a corresponding set of 23 l...

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Main Authors: Dowse, R, Ehlers, M
Format: Others
Language:English
Published: 2001
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10962/d1006058
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spelling ndltd-netd.ac.za-oai-union.ndltd.org-rhodes-vital-63622018-03-06T03:55:31ZThe evaluation of pharmaceutical pictograms in a low-literate South African populationDowse, REhlers, MAn inability to read and understand written medication instructions may be a major contributory factor to non-compliance in certain patient populations, particularly in countries with a high illiteracy rate such as South Africa. Twenty three pictograms from the USP-DI and a corresponding set of 23 locally developed, culturally sensitive pictograms for conveying medication instructions were evaluated in 46 Xhosa respondents who had attended school for a maximum of 7 years. Respondents were tested for their interpretation of all 46 pictograms at the first interview and again 3 weeks later. The correct meaning of each pictogram was explained at the end of the first interview. Preference for either the Local or USP pictograms was determined. At the follow-up interview, 20 of the Local pictograms complied with the ANSI criterion of ≥85% comprehension, compared with 11 of the USP pictograms. Respondents indicated an overwhelming preference for the Local pictograms.2001Article17 pagespdfvital:6362http://hdl.handle.net/10962/d1006058English
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language English
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description An inability to read and understand written medication instructions may be a major contributory factor to non-compliance in certain patient populations, particularly in countries with a high illiteracy rate such as South Africa. Twenty three pictograms from the USP-DI and a corresponding set of 23 locally developed, culturally sensitive pictograms for conveying medication instructions were evaluated in 46 Xhosa respondents who had attended school for a maximum of 7 years. Respondents were tested for their interpretation of all 46 pictograms at the first interview and again 3 weeks later. The correct meaning of each pictogram was explained at the end of the first interview. Preference for either the Local or USP pictograms was determined. At the follow-up interview, 20 of the Local pictograms complied with the ANSI criterion of ≥85% comprehension, compared with 11 of the USP pictograms. Respondents indicated an overwhelming preference for the Local pictograms.
author Dowse, R
Ehlers, M
spellingShingle Dowse, R
Ehlers, M
The evaluation of pharmaceutical pictograms in a low-literate South African population
author_facet Dowse, R
Ehlers, M
author_sort Dowse, R
title The evaluation of pharmaceutical pictograms in a low-literate South African population
title_short The evaluation of pharmaceutical pictograms in a low-literate South African population
title_full The evaluation of pharmaceutical pictograms in a low-literate South African population
title_fullStr The evaluation of pharmaceutical pictograms in a low-literate South African population
title_full_unstemmed The evaluation of pharmaceutical pictograms in a low-literate South African population
title_sort evaluation of pharmaceutical pictograms in a low-literate south african population
publishDate 2001
url http://hdl.handle.net/10962/d1006058
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