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Description

We assessed risk perception and behavioral intention in response to visualizations that display minimally important differences (MIDs) in patient-reported outcomes (PROs) among heart failure patients. Participants had low financial resources, education, cognitive status, health literacy, numeracy, and graph literacy. The majority of participants perceived risk and reported intention to act based on visualizations showing MIDs of worsening symptoms, suggesting these may be effective tools for communicating risk in PROs to a diverse sample of patients.

Learning Objective: The audience will gain understanding of the potential for various visualizations of patient-reported outcomes to communicate risk to a diverse sample of heart failure patients.

Authors:

Meghan Reading Turchioe (Presenter)
Weill Cornell Medicine

Lisa Grossman, Columbia University
Annie Myers, Weill Cornell Medicine
Ruth Creber, Weill Cornell Medicine

Presentation Materials:

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