Marcu Afrodita, Muller Cecile, Ream Emma, Whitaker Katriina L
School of Health Sciences, Faculty of Health & Medical Sciences, University of Surrey, Guildford, United Kingdom.
School of Psychology, Faculty of Health & Medical Sciences, University of Surrey, Guildford, United Kingdom.
J Med Internet Res. 2019 Feb 6;21(2):e12400. doi: 10.2196/12400.
People engage in health information-seeking online when experiencing unusual or unfamiliar bodily changes. It is not well understood how people consult the internet for health information after the onset of unfamiliar symptoms and before receiving a potential diagnosis and how online information-seeking can help people appraise their symptoms. This lack of evidence may be partly due to methodological limitations in capturing in real time the online information-seeking process.
We explored women's symptom attribution and online health information-seeking in response to a hypothetical and unfamiliar breast change suggestive of cancer (nipple rash). We also aimed to establish the feasibility of capturing in real time the online information-seeking process with a tool designed to track participant online searches and visited websites, the Vizzata browser tracker.
An online survey was completed by 56 cancer-free women (mean age 60.34 [SD 7.73] years) responding to a scenario asking them to imagine noticing a red scaly rash on the nipple. Participants were asked to make symptom attributions when presented with the scenario (T1) and again after seeking information online (T2). The online tracking tool, embedded in the survey, was used to capture in real time participant search terms and accessed websites.
The tracking tool captured the search terms and accessed websites of most of the participants (46/56, 82%). For the rest (10/56, 18%), there was evidence of engagement in online information-seeking (eg, medical terminology and cancer attribution at T2) despite their searching activity not being recorded. A total of 25 participants considered cancer as a potential cause for the nipple rash at T1, yet only one of these used cancer as a search term. Most participants (40/46, 87%) used rash-related search terms, particularly nipple rash and rash on nipple. The majority (41/46, 89%) accessed websites containing breast cancer information, with the National Health Service webpage "Paget disease of the nipple" being the most visited one. At T2, after engaging in the internet search task, more participants attributed the nipple rash to breast cancer than at T1 (37/46, 66% vs 25/46, 45%), although a small number of participants (6/46) changed from making a cancer attribution at T1 to a noncancer one at T2.
Making a cancer attribution for an unfamiliar breast change did not necessarily translate into cancer-termed searches. Equally, not all internet searches led to a cancer attribution. The findings suggest that online information-seeking may not necessarily help women who experience unfamiliar breast cancer symptoms understand their condition. Despite some technical issues, this study showed that it is feasible to use an online browser tracking tool to capture in real time information-seeking about unfamiliar symptoms.
人们在经历不寻常或不熟悉的身体变化时会在网上寻求健康信息。对于人们在出现不熟悉的症状后、接受潜在诊断之前如何在网上查询健康信息,以及网上信息查询如何帮助人们评估自己的症状,目前还了解得不够充分。缺乏这方面的证据可能部分归因于在实时捕捉在线信息查询过程中存在方法上的局限性。
我们探讨了女性针对一种提示癌症的假设性且不熟悉的乳房变化(乳头皮疹)进行症状归因和在线健康信息查询的情况。我们还旨在确定使用一种旨在跟踪参与者在线搜索和访问网站的工具——Vizzata浏览器跟踪器,实时捕捉在线信息查询过程的可行性。
56名无癌症的女性(平均年龄60.34[标准差7.73]岁)完成了一项在线调查,她们要回应一个情景,即想象自己注意到乳头上有红色鳞屑皮疹。要求参与者在看到情景时(T1)以及在网上寻求信息之后(T2)做出症状归因。嵌入在调查中的在线跟踪工具用于实时捕捉参与者的搜索词和访问的网站。
跟踪工具捕捉到了大多数参与者(46/56,82%)的搜索词和访问的网站。其余(10/56,18%)的人虽然搜索活动未被记录,但有参与在线信息查询的证据(例如在T2时使用医学术语和癌症归因)。共有25名参与者在T1时认为癌症是乳头皮疹的潜在原因,但其中只有一人将癌症用作搜索词。大多数参与者(40/46,87%)使用了与皮疹相关的搜索词,特别是乳头皮疹和乳头上的皮疹。大多数人(41/46,89%)访问了包含乳腺癌信息的网站,英国国家医疗服务体系(NHS)网页“乳头佩吉特病”是访问量最大的页面。在T2时,在完成互联网搜索任务后,将乳头皮疹归因于乳腺癌的参与者比T1时更多(37/46,66%对25/46,45%),尽管有少数参与者(6/46)从T1时的癌症归因变为T2时的非癌症归因。
将一种不熟悉的乳房变化归因于癌症并不一定转化为使用与癌症相关的搜索词。同样,并非所有的网络搜索都会导致癌症归因。研究结果表明,在线信息查询不一定能帮助经历不熟悉乳腺癌症状的女性了解自己的病情。尽管存在一些技术问题,但这项研究表明使用在线浏览器跟踪工具实时捕捉关于不熟悉症状的信息查询是可行的。