Garcia Michael, Daugherty Christopher, Ben Khallouq Bertha, Maugans Todd
1University of Central Florida College of Medicine; and.
2Division of Pediatric Neurosurgery, Nemours Children's Hospital, Orlando, Florida.
J Neurosurg Pediatr. 2018 May;21(5):535-541. doi: 10.3171/2017.10.PEDS17177. Epub 2018 Feb 16.
OBJECTIVE The Internet is used frequently by patients and family members to acquire information about pediatric neurosurgical conditions. The sources, nature, accuracy, and usefulness of this information have not been examined recently. The authors analyzed the results from searches of 10 common pediatric neurosurgical terms using a novel scoring test to assess the value of the educational information obtained. METHODS Google and Bing searches were performed for 10 common pediatric neurosurgical topics (concussion, craniosynostosis, hydrocephalus, pediatric brain tumor, pediatric Chiari malformation, pediatric epilepsy surgery, pediatric neurosurgery, plagiocephaly, spina bifida, and tethered spinal cord). The first 10 "hits" obtained with each search engine were analyzed using the Currency, Relevance, Authority, Accuracy, and Purpose (CRAAP) test, which assigns a numerical score in each of 5 domains. Agreement between results was assessed for 1) concurrent searches with Google and Bing; 2) Google searches over time (6 months apart); 3) Google searches using mobile and PC platforms concurrently; and 4) searches using privacy settings. Readability was assessed with an online analytical tool. RESULTS Google and Bing searches yielded information with similar CRAAP scores (mean 72% and 75%, respectively), but with frequently differing results (58% concordance/matching results). There was a high level of agreement (72% concordance) over time for Google searches and also between searches using general and privacy settings (92% concordance). Government sources scored the best in both CRAAP score and readability. Hospitals and universities were the most prevalent sources, but these sources had the lowest CRAAP scores, due in part to an abundance of self-marketing. The CRAAP scores for mobile and desktop platforms did not differ significantly (p = 0.49). CONCLUSIONS Google and Bing searches yielded useful educational information, using either mobile or PC platforms. Most information was relevant and accurate; however, the depth and breadth of information was variable. Search results over a 6-month period were moderately stable. Pediatric neurosurgery practices and neurosurgical professional organization websites were inferior (less current, less accurate, less authoritative, and less purposeful) to governmental and encyclopedia-type resources such as Wikipedia. This presents an opportunity for pediatric neurosurgeons to participate in the creation of better online patient/parent educational material.
目的 患者及其家属经常利用互联网获取有关小儿神经外科疾病的信息。此类信息的来源、性质、准确性及实用性尚未得到近期研究。作者使用一种新颖的评分测试,分析了对10个常见小儿神经外科术语进行搜索的结果,以评估所获取教育信息的价值。方法 针对10个常见小儿神经外科主题(脑震荡、颅缝早闭、脑积水、小儿脑肿瘤、小儿Chiari畸形、小儿癫痫手术、小儿神经外科、扁头畸形、脊柱裂和脊髓拴系)在谷歌和必应上进行搜索。使用“时效性、相关性、权威性、准确性和目的”(CRAAP)测试对每个搜索引擎获取的前10条“命中结果”进行分析,该测试在5个领域中的每个领域都给出一个数值分数。对以下情况的结果一致性进行评估:1)谷歌和必应的同步搜索;2)谷歌随时间的搜索(间隔6个月);3)同时使用移动和PC平台进行谷歌搜索;4)使用隐私设置进行搜索。使用在线分析工具评估可读性。结果 谷歌和必应搜索得出的信息具有相似的CRAAP分数(分别平均为72%和75%),但结果经常不同(一致性/匹配结果为58%)。谷歌搜索随时间的一致性较高(72%),使用常规设置和隐私设置的搜索之间的一致性也较高(92%)。政府来源在CRAAP分数和可读性方面得分最高。医院和大学是最常见的来源,但这些来源的CRAAP分数最低,部分原因是大量的自我推销。移动和桌面平台的CRAAP分数没有显著差异(p = 0.49)。结论 谷歌和必应搜索使用移动或PC平台都能得出有用的教育信息。大多数信息相关且准确;然而,信息的深度和广度各不相同。6个月期间的搜索结果适度稳定。小儿神经外科医疗机构和神经外科专业组织网站比政府和维基百科等百科全书式资源逊色(更新程度更低、准确性更低、权威性更低且目的性更弱)。这为小儿神经外科医生参与创建更好的在线患者/家长教育材料提供了机会。