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ORIGINAL ARTICLE
Development, validation and international certification of a health portal for people with disabilities
Revista Brasileira de Enfermagem. 2022;75(Suppl 2):e20210082
04-22-2022
Resumo
ORIGINAL ARTICLEDevelopment, validation and international certification of a health portal for people with disabilities
Revista Brasileira de Enfermagem. 2022;75(Suppl 2):e20210082
04-22-2022DOI 10.1590/0034-7167-2021-0082
Visualizações0ABSTRACT
Objectives:
to develop, validate with specialists and internationally certify a virtual health portal, the D+Informação.
Methods:
a quantitative methodological study. Twenty-two expert judges validated the Portal in the health and computer science areas using the Content Validity Index and the Gwet test. International certification followed HONcode principles® to ensure the trust of information.
Results:
judges of health and computer science validated the portal obtaining a minimum Content Validity Index in more than 75% of the topics, in addition to the evaluation of general agreement, 0.253; content evaluation, 0.193, and interface evaluation, 0.230. All presented the value of Gwet with p ≤ 0,001.
Conclusions:
the portal D+Informação was developed, validated, internationally certified and is hosted on this website:
Palavras-chave: Access to InformationConsumer Health InformationDigital InclusionDisabled PeopleWebsiteVer mais -
ARTIGO ORIGINAL
Online information related to childhood cancer and COVID-19 pandemic: a thematic analysis
Revista Brasileira de Enfermagem. 2021;74(suppl 1):e20201056
04-14-2021
Resumo
ARTIGO ORIGINALOnline information related to childhood cancer and COVID-19 pandemic: a thematic analysis
Revista Brasileira de Enfermagem. 2021;74(suppl 1):e20201056
04-14-2021DOI 10.1590/0034-7167-2020-1056
Visualizações0Ver maisABSTRACT
Objective:
To analyze online information available on the internet about COVID-19 and childhood cancer and discuss its reach potential with regard to supporting family functioning.
Method:
Documentary research supported by thematic analysis and the concept of family functioning and support. A total of 27 publications available on the websites of reference institutions in pediatric oncology, from March 1 to May 31, 2020, were analyzed.
Results:
Two themes guided the presentation of results with emphasis on language and sustainability assumptions to content, and to conveyed meanings and intentionality. The publications prospect families/people with basic knowledge about COVID-19 and have little information specific to the relationship with childhood cancer.
Final considerations:
Threatening circumstances require informational support. This study revealed incipient of specificity and a prescriptive tone in the online information available in early times of the pandemic, questioning the scope of support for family functioning.