Understanding the landscape of web-based medical misinformation about vaccination

被引:7
|
作者
Wolfe, Christopher R. [1 ]
Eylem, Andrew A. [1 ]
Dandignac, Mitchell [1 ]
Lowe, Savannah R. [1 ]
Weber, Margo L. [1 ]
Scudiere, Laura [2 ]
Reyna, Valerie F. [3 ]
机构
[1] Miami Univ, Dept Psychol, Oxford, OH 45056 USA
[2] Marathon Cty Hlth Dept, Wausau, WI USA
[3] Cornell Univ, Ithaca, NY 14850 USA
基金
美国国家科学基金会;
关键词
Inoculation information; Google search terms; Fuzzy trace theory; Disinformation; Health information; Psycholinguistic properties of websites; MYSIDE BIAS; DECISIONS; ARGUMENTATION; MEMORY;
D O I
10.3758/s13428-022-01840-5
中图分类号
B841 [心理学研究方法];
学科分类号
040201 ;
摘要
Given the high rates of vaccine hesitancy, web-based medical misinformation about vaccination is a serious issue. We sought to understand the nature of Google searches leading to medical misinformation about vaccination, and guided by fuzzy-trace theory, the characteristics of misinformation pages related to comprehension, inference-making, and medical decision-making. We collected data from web pages presenting vaccination information. We assessed whether web pages presented medical misinformation, had an overarching gist, used narrative, and employed emotional appeals. We used Search Engine Optimization tools to determine the number of backlinks from other web pages, monthly Google traffic, and Google Keywords. We used Coh-Metrix to measure readability and Gist Inference Scores (GIS). For medical misinformation web pages, Google traffic and backlinks were heavily skewed with means of 138.8 visitors/month and 805 backlinks per page. Medical misinformation pages were significantly more likely than other vaccine pages to have backlinks from other pages, and significantly less likely to receive at least one visitor from Google searches per month. The top Google searches leading to medical misinformation were "the truth about vaccinations," "dangers of vaccination," and "pro con vaccines." Most frequently, pages challenged vaccine safety, with 32.7% having an overarching gist, 7.7% presenting narratives, and 17.3% making emotional appeals. Emotional appeals were significantly more common with medical misinformation than other high-traffic vaccination pages. Misinformation pages had a mean readability grade level of 11.5, and a mean GIS of - 0.234. Low GIS scores are a likely barrier to understanding gist, and are the "Achilles' heel" of misinformation pages.
引用
收藏
页码:348 / 363
页数:16
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [41] Medical Web-Based Role Play Enhances Teaching of Medical Terms
    Ting, Kuang-Yun
    PROCEEDINGS OF THE 2ND IEEE EURASIA CONFERENCE ON BIOMEDICAL ENGINEERING, HEALTHCARE AND SUSTAINABILITY 2020 (IEEE ECBIOS 2020): BIOMEDICAL ENGINEERING, HEALTHCARE AND SUSTAINABILITY, 2020, : 51 - 53
  • [42] Web-Based Electronic Health Records Improve Data Completeness and Reduce Medical Discrepancies in Employee Vaccination Programs
    Salazar, Monica
    Stinson, Kaylan E.
    Sillau, Stefan H.
    Good, Linda
    Newman, Lee S.
    INFECTION CONTROL AND HOSPITAL EPIDEMIOLOGY, 2012, 33 (01): : 84 - 86
  • [43] Web-based platform for collaborative medical imaging research
    Rittner, Leticia
    Bento, Mariana P.
    Costa, Andre L.
    Souza, Roberto M.
    Machado, Rubens C.
    Lotufo, Roberto A.
    MEDICAL IMAGING 2015: PACS AND IMAGING INFORMATICS: NEXT GENERATION AND INNOVATIONS, 2015, 9418
  • [44] World Medical Association launches web-based medical ethics course
    Hamm, Danielle
    English, Veronica
    Harrison, Caroline
    Mussell, Rebecca
    Sheather, Julian
    Sommerville, Ann
    JOURNAL OF MEDICAL ETHICS, 2007, 33 (12) : 744 - 744
  • [45] RayPlus: a Web-Based Platform for Medical Image Processing
    Rong Yuan
    Ming Luo
    Zhi Sun
    Shuyue Shi
    Peng Xiao
    Qingguo Xie
    Journal of Digital Imaging, 2017, 30 : 197 - 203
  • [46] Web-based collaborative building of medical knowledge bases
    Boegl, K
    Chizzali-Bonfadin, C
    Adlassnig, KP
    JOURNAL OF THE AMERICAN MEDICAL INFORMATICS ASSOCIATION, 1998, : 977 - 977
  • [47] WebMIRS: Web-based Medical Information Retrieval System
    Long, LR
    Pillemer, SR
    Lawrence, RC
    Goh, GH
    Neve, L
    Thoma, GR
    STORAGE AND RETRIEVAL FOR IMAGE AND VIDEO DATABASES VI, 1997, 3312 : 392 - 403
  • [48] Innovative web-based solution to training medical dosimetrists
    Boyer, A
    Kaylor, S
    MEDICAL PHYSICS, 2003, 30 (06) : 1344 - 1344
  • [49] Web-based feedback of medical student assessment results
    Fox, S
    Reid, WA
    Evans, P
    MEDICAL EDUCATION, 2003, 37 (11) : 1036 - 1037
  • [50] Web-Based AI System for Medical Image Segmentation
    Chen, Hao
    Liu, Taowen
    Hu, Songyun
    Yu, Leyang
    Li, Yiqi
    Tao, Sihan
    Lee, Jacqueline
    Fetit, Ahmed E.
    MEDICAL IMAGE UNDERSTANDING AND ANALYSIS, MIUA 2023, 2024, 14122 : 231 - 241