Skip to main content
. 2010 Mar 3;10:12. doi: 10.1186/1472-6947-10-12

Table 3.

Evaluation Data from Usability testing (Study 3)†

Booklet Web
N = 14 N = 14
Age M = 53.8 M = 54.0
SD = 7.8 SD = 7.2
Race
 White 28.6% 50.0%
 African American 71.4% 50.0%
Education
<HS grad 21.4% 35.7%
 Some college 42.9% 21.4%
 College Graduate 14.3% 0.0%
 Graduate work/degree 21.4% 42.9%
Marital Status
 Married/living as married 50.0% 35.7%
 Not married 50.0% 64.2%
Employment Status
 Not employed/Retired 50.0% 50.0%
 Employed 41.9% 50.0%
Health Insurance
 Yes 92.9% 78.6%
How often Screened
 3-6 months 7.1% 14.3%
 Annually 50.0% 42.9%
 Every 2 years 0.0% 0.0%
 Don't know/Missing 42.9% 42.9%
Prior Abnormal Screening Result
 Yes 7.1% 7.1%
Amount of Information Provided
 Much/A little less info than wanted 7.1% 21.4%
 About Right 50.0% 50.0%
 A little more/a lot more info than wanted 42.8% 21.4%
Length of booklet/website
 Much too long/a little too long 35.7% 50.0%
 About right 50.0% 42.9%
 Wanted a little/much longer 14.2% 7.1%
Clarity
 Everything/most things clear 85.7% 92.9%
 Some Clear 7.1% 7.1%
 Many unclear 0.0% 0.0%
 Missing data 7.2%
Overall Message
 Definitely/Probably not screen 14.3% 14.3%
 Neither 14.3% 35.7%
 Definitely/Probably Screen 71.5% 42.8%

† No significance testing was conducted due to overlap between groups (6 men participating in web usability testing also participated in booklet usability testing)