Somerson Jeremy S, Bois Aaron J, Jeng Jeffrey, Bohsali Kamal I, Hinchey John W, Wirth Michael A
University of Texas Medical Branch, 301 University Blvd, Galveston, TX, 77555, USA.
Sport Medicine Centre, University of Calgary, 2500 University Drive NW, Calgary, AB, T2N 1N4, Canada.
BMC Musculoskelet Disord. 2018 Apr 11;19(1):112. doi: 10.1186/s12891-018-2018-6.
The objective of this study was to assess the source, quality, accuracy, and completeness of Internet-based information for shoulder arthritis.
A web search was performed using three common Internet search engines and the top 50 sites from each search were analyzed. Information sources were categorized into academic, commercial, non-profit, and physician sites. Information quality was measured using the Health On the Net (HON) Foundation principles, content accuracy by counting factual errors and completeness using a custom template.
After removal of duplicates and sites that did not provide an overview of shoulder arthritis, 49 websites remained for analysis. The majority of sites were from commercial (n = 16, 33%) and physician (n = 16, 33%) sources. An additional 12 sites (24%) were from an academic institution and five sites (10%) were from a non-profit organization. Commercial sites had the highest number of errors, with a five-fold likelihood of containing an error compared to an academic site. Non-profit sites had the highest HON scores, with an average of 9.6 points on a 16-point scale. The completeness score was highest for academic sites, with an average score of 19.2 ± 6.7 (maximum score of 49 points); other information sources had lower scores (commercial, 15.2 ± 2.9; non-profit, 18.7 ± 6.8; physician, 16.6 ± 6.3).
Patient information on the Internet regarding shoulder arthritis is of mixed accuracy, quality, and completeness. Surgeons should actively direct patients to higher-quality Internet sources.
本研究的目的是评估基于互联网的肩关节炎信息的来源、质量、准确性和完整性。
使用三个常见的互联网搜索引擎进行网络搜索,并对每个搜索结果的前50个网站进行分析。信息来源分为学术、商业、非营利和医生网站。信息质量根据健康网络(HON)基金会原则进行衡量,内容准确性通过计算事实错误数量来评估,完整性则使用自定义模板进行评估。
在去除重复网站和未提供肩关节炎概述的网站后,剩余49个网站进行分析。大多数网站来自商业(n = 16,33%)和医生(n = 16,33%)来源。另外12个网站(24%)来自学术机构,5个网站(10%)来自非营利组织。商业网站的错误数量最多,与学术网站相比,包含错误的可能性高出五倍。非营利网站的HON得分最高,在16分制中平均得分为9.6分。学术网站的完整性得分最高,平均得分为19.2 ± 6.7(满分49分);其他信息来源的得分较低(商业,15.2 ± 2.9;非营利,18.7 ± 6.8;医生,16.6 ± 6.3)。
互联网上关于肩关节炎的患者信息在准确性、质量和完整性方面参差不齐。外科医生应积极引导患者获取质量更高的互联网资源。