Background Kidney transplantation offers substantial clinical and economic benefits for patients with end-stage kidney disease (ESKD), yet organ shortages persist. Enhancing public awareness and health literacy regarding kidney donation is essential for effective donor recruitment. While online patient education materials are primary drivers of public perception, their readability, digital engagement, and accessibility remain underexplored barriers. Methods We analyzed the most prominent kidney donation websites identified through U.S.-based Google searches, including 11 primary organizations and 16 affiliated subdomains, for a total of 27 websites. Readability was benchmarked using Flesch-Kincaid, SMOG, and Gunning Fog indices. To assess qualitative metrics, we deployed a generative AI framework utilizing a Large Language Model (Claude) to conduct automated sentiment analysis and tone evaluation, validated by human review. We systematically mapped digital engagement features, including multimedia, interactive tools, and multilingual support, to determine content comprehensiveness. Results Websites consistently provided accurate information with a generally positive or neutral tone. Average readability exceeded recommended levels, with a combined mean grade of 12.3; 34% of websites were written at a college-level reading standard. Consensus across content was high. Multimedia elements were widely used, but engagement features were limited; only 30% of sites included extensive testimonials, and interactive tools were absent. AI-based analysis enabled standardized and reproducible evaluation, highlighting opportunities to improve accessibility, tone, and inclusivity. Conclusion Current U.S. kidney donation digital resources present a barrier to health equity due to excessive reading complexity and static engagement models. AI provides a scalable, reproducible framework to audit and optimize patient education materials. Future initiatives must leverage AI-guided content optimization to bridge the literacy gap, potentially increasing donor registration and access to transplantation.
Bizer et al. (Sun,) studied this question.