Reder M, Thygesen LC. Crowd-figure-pictograms improve women’s knowledge about mammography screening. Results from a randomised controlled trial. BMC Research Notes. 2018;11(1): 332.**Objective** To evaluate the effect of crowd-figure-pictograms on women’s numeric knowledge about mammography screening in a three-armed parallel randomised controlled trial. **Results** 552 women were randomised to receive (1) non-numeric information (n = 192), (2) non-numeric and numeric information (n = 186), or (3) non-numeric and numeric information complemented by crowd-figure-pictograms (n = 174). Baseline numeric knowledge was low (control 0.61, numeric 0.66, and pictogram 0.51 on a scale ranging from 0 to 5). Women in the crowd-figure-pictogram group h...
Reder M, Kolip P. Does a decision aid improve informed choice in mammography screening? Study protoc...
Objectives: Mammography screening is generally accepted in women aged 50-69, but the balance between...
Reder M, Kolip P. Does a decision aid improve informed choice in mammography screening? Results from...
Additional file 1. Scores on the numeric questions by intervention group. Error bars indicate 95% co...
OBJECTIVE: To assess the effect of providing structured information about the benefits and harms of ...
Mammography screening for breast cancer is widely available in many countries. Initially praised as ...
Background Screening programmes are often actively promoted to achieve high coverage, which may resu...
Fig. 1. The six visualizations evaluated in our study, illustrating the classic mammography problem ...
Introduction: Women are largely unaware that mammography screening can cause overdetection of incons...
In 2014, breast cancer was the second leading cause of death among Canadian women, with women over a...
There is uncertainty about the magnitude of the effect of screening mammography on breast cancer mor...
Reder M, Soellner R, Kolip P. Do Women With High eHealth Literacy Profit More From a Decision Aid on...
Background: The decision to participate or not in breast cancer screening is complex due to the trad...
Importance: Mammography screening currently relies on subjective human interpretation. Artificial in...
OBJECTIVE: To investigate the general population's view on the use of artificial intelligence (AI) f...
Reder M, Kolip P. Does a decision aid improve informed choice in mammography screening? Study protoc...
Objectives: Mammography screening is generally accepted in women aged 50-69, but the balance between...
Reder M, Kolip P. Does a decision aid improve informed choice in mammography screening? Results from...
Additional file 1. Scores on the numeric questions by intervention group. Error bars indicate 95% co...
OBJECTIVE: To assess the effect of providing structured information about the benefits and harms of ...
Mammography screening for breast cancer is widely available in many countries. Initially praised as ...
Background Screening programmes are often actively promoted to achieve high coverage, which may resu...
Fig. 1. The six visualizations evaluated in our study, illustrating the classic mammography problem ...
Introduction: Women are largely unaware that mammography screening can cause overdetection of incons...
In 2014, breast cancer was the second leading cause of death among Canadian women, with women over a...
There is uncertainty about the magnitude of the effect of screening mammography on breast cancer mor...
Reder M, Soellner R, Kolip P. Do Women With High eHealth Literacy Profit More From a Decision Aid on...
Background: The decision to participate or not in breast cancer screening is complex due to the trad...
Importance: Mammography screening currently relies on subjective human interpretation. Artificial in...
OBJECTIVE: To investigate the general population's view on the use of artificial intelligence (AI) f...
Reder M, Kolip P. Does a decision aid improve informed choice in mammography screening? Study protoc...
Objectives: Mammography screening is generally accepted in women aged 50-69, but the balance between...
Reder M, Kolip P. Does a decision aid improve informed choice in mammography screening? Results from...