Zaila Kassandra E, Osadchiy Vadim, Anderson Ashley S, Eleswarapu Sriram V, Mills Jesse N
Division of Andrology, Department of Urology, David Geffen School of Medicine, University of California, Los Angeles, CA, USA.
Consortium for Health Activity on Social Media (CHASM), David Geffen School of Medicine, University of California, Los Angeles, CA, USA.
Transl Androl Urol. 2020 Jun;9(3):1374-1381. doi: 10.21037/tau-20-580.
Streaming video has emerged as a dominant content-delivery medium for healthcare information, with over 30 million visitors daily to the YouTube platform alone. Videos related to men's health have proliferated, but content produced by trained health care providers remains scarce. We evaluated educational YouTube streaming videos created in collaboration with a large, university-based health system focused on male factor infertility, men's health, and Peyronie's disease, uploaded during 2016-2018. All videos featured a board-certified urologist with fellowship training in andrology. Using YouTube's native analytics tools, we extracted data on views, engagement, and geographic reach through 8/2019. We obtained data for streaming videos on male infertility (n=3), general men's health (n=2), and Peyronie's disease (n=1). Video length ranged from 29 to 51 min, with a mean video duration of 39 min 41 sec. Actual mean watch time by viewers ranged from 3:45 to 8:30. The total view count was 646,684, with a watch time of nearly 3 million mins, reaching viewers in 47 countries. Fifty-three percent of watch time was on a mobile device and 33% on a personal computer. As patients increasingly turn to the internet for health information, health systems and physicians may wish to leverage high impact social media platforms such as YouTube to share evidence-based content. This study highlights the impressive reach a health system-sponsored video intervention using YouTube can have in sharing accurate video content related to a diverse range of men's health topics. This is the first health systems-based streaming-video intervention to leverage the video streaming and social media platform YouTube, to facilitate sharing reputable, high quality, and evidence-based men's health content.
流媒体视频已成为医疗保健信息的主要内容传播媒介,仅YouTube平台每天就有超过3000万访问者。与男性健康相关的视频大量涌现,但由训练有素的医疗保健提供者制作的内容仍然稀缺。我们评估了2016年至2018年期间上传的、与一家大型大学健康系统合作创建的、聚焦男性因素不育、男性健康和佩罗尼氏病的教育性YouTube流媒体视频。所有视频均由一位获得委员会认证、接受过男科 fellowship 培训的泌尿科医生主讲。我们使用YouTube的原生分析工具,提取了截至2019年8月的观看量、参与度和地理覆盖范围的数据。我们获取了关于男性不育(n = 3)、一般男性健康(n = 2)和佩罗尼氏病(n = 1)的流媒体视频数据。视频长度从29分钟到51分钟不等,平均视频时长为39分41秒。观众的实际平均观看时长从3:45到8:30不等。总观看次数为646,684次,观看时长近300万分钟,覆盖了47个国家的观众。53%的观看时长是在移动设备上,33%是在个人电脑上。随着患者越来越多地转向互联网获取健康信息,医疗系统和医生不妨利用YouTube等高影响力的社交媒体平台来分享循证内容。本研究强调了医疗系统赞助的视频干预利用YouTube在分享与各种男性健康主题相关的准确视频内容方面所能达到的惊人覆盖面。这是首个基于医疗系统的流媒体视频干预,利用视频流和社交媒体平台YouTube来促进分享可靠、高质量和循证的男性健康内容。