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Digital health information on autoinflammatory diseases: a YouTube quality analysis

Mareen Sasse, Sarah Ohrndorf, Andriko Palmowski, Annette D. Wagner, Gerd R Burmester, Anne Pankow, Martin Krusche

2022Rheumatology International21 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Getting access to specialists for autoinflammatory diseases (AID) can be challenging. Therefore, an increasing number of patients and healthcare professionals are seeking information on AID via the Internet, using the video platform YouTube, for example. However, the quality of such videos has not yet been evaluated. A YouTube search was conducted to assess videos about AID to evaluate the quality and usefulness from both the patient's and healthcare professional´s perspectives. Video duration, number of views, likes, dislikes, comments, and uploading source on various AID were extracted. Video quality was evaluated by the modified global quality scale (GQS). The reliability was assessed by the modified five-point DISCERN score. In total, 140 videos were screened of which 105 videos met the inclusion criteria for further analysis. Based on the GQS, the overall quality of videos for patients was found to be low in 64.8%, intermediate in 27.6%, and high in 7.6% of videos. The quality of videos for professionals was similar (54.3% low, 23.8% intermediate, and 21.9% of high quality). Videos were more often targeting medical professionals (65.7%) and less often patients (34.3%). This analysis demonstrates that the majority of videos regarding AIDs are of limited quality. Available videos more often address users with a professional medical background. Only a small proportion of existing videos provide understandable and useful information for AID patients. Thus, there is a strong need to develop high-quality and audience-oriented videos in the context of educational campaigns for these rare disease groups.

Topics & Concepts

Quality (philosophy)UploadContext (archaeology)MedicineThe InternetHealth professionalsVideo qualityHealth careScale (ratio)Social mediaInformation qualityMedical educationInternet privacyMultimediaWorld Wide WebComputer scienceInformation systemEngineeringEconomicsBiologyPhysicsEpistemologyQuantum mechanicsEconomic growthMetric (unit)PhilosophyOperations managementPaleontologyElectrical engineeringViral-associated cancers and disordersSocial Media in Health EducationHealth Literacy and Information Accessibility
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