Prostate Cancer on the Web—Expedient Tool for Patients’ Decision-Making?

被引:0
作者
Hendrik Borgmann
Jan-Henning Wölm
Stefan Vallo
Rene Mager
Johannes Huber
Johannes Breyer
Johannes Salem
Stacy Loeb
Axel Haferkamp
Igor Tsaur
机构
[1] University Hospital Frankfurt,Department of Urology
[2] TU Dresden,Department of Urology
[3] University Hospital Regensburg,Department of Urology
[4] St Josefs-Hospital,Department of Urology
[5] New York University and Manhattan Veterans Affairs Medical Center,Department of Urology and Population Health
来源
Journal of Cancer Education | 2017年 / 32卷
关键词
Prostatic neoplasms; Internet; Consumer health information; Health services research; Decision making;
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
Many patients diagnosed with cancer search for health information on the Web. We aimed to assess the quality and reliability of online health information on prostate cancer. Google, Yahoo, and Bing were searched for the term “prostate cancer.” After selecting the most frequented websites, quality was measured by DISCERN score, JAMA benchmark criteria, and presence of HONcode certification. Popularity was assessed by Alexa tool, while accessibility, usability, and reliability were investigated by LIDA tool. Readability was analyzed by Flesch-Kincaid Reading Grade Level and Automated Readability Index. All 13 selected websites were rated as being of high quality according to the DISCERN instrument (76.5 ± 2.6 out of 80 points). JAMA benchmark criteria were fulfilled by 87 % of websites, whereas only 37 % were certified by the HONcode. Median Alexa Traffic Rank was 2718 ranging from 7 to 679,038. Websites received 2.3 ± 0.5 daily pageviews per visitor and users spent an average of 2 min 58 s ± 39 sec on the website. Accessibility (92 ± 5 %) and usability (92 ± 3 %) scores were high and reliability (88 ± 8 %) moderate according to the LIDA tool. Flesch-Kincaid Grade Level was 7.9 ± 2.2, and Automated Readability Index was 7.5 ± 2.4, rating the websites as fairly difficult to read. In conclusion, quality, accessibility, and usability of websites on prostate cancer provided a high rating in the current analysis. These findings are encouraging in view of the growing frequency of patients’ access of health information online.
引用
收藏
页码:135 / 140
页数:5
相关论文
共 56 条
  • [1] Diaz JA(2002)Patients’ use of the Internet for medical information J Gen Intern Med 17 180-185
  • [2] Griffith RA(2012)Impact of health information-seeking behavior and personal factors on preferred role in treatment decision making in men with newly diagnosed prostate cancer Cancer Nurs 35 411-418
  • [3] Ng JJ(2014)Satisfaction with information used to choose prostate cancer treatment J Urol 191 1265-1271
  • [4] Reinert SE(2006)Prostate cancer on the Internet—information or misinformation? J Urol 175 1836-1842
  • [5] Friedmann PD(2014)The design and content of orthodontic practise websites in the UK is suboptimal and does not correlate with search ranking Eur J Orthod 8 175-182
  • [6] Moulton AW(2006)Quality of health information on the Internet in pediatric neuro-oncology Neuro Oncol 277 1244-1245
  • [7] Davison BJ(1997)Assessing, controlling, and assuring the quality of medical information on the Internet: Caveant lector et viewor—Let the reader and viewer beware JAMA 53 105-111
  • [8] Breckon EN(1999)DISCERN: an instrument for judging the quality of written consumer health information on treatment choices J Epidemiol Community Health 41 95-105
  • [9] Gilbert SM(2015)A methodology to analyze the quality of health information on the internet: the example of diabetic neuropathy Diabetes Educ 108 1874-1878
  • [10] Sanda MG(2011)Consumerism and its impact on robotic-assisted radical prostatectomy BJU Int 16 869-875