Department of Surgery and Perioperative Care, Dell Medical School, The University of Texas at Austin, Austin, TX, USA.
Clin Orthop Relat Res. 2021 Oct 1;479(10):2296-2302. doi: 10.1097/CORR.0000000000001773.
Studies of online health information have addressed completeness and adherence to evidence, which can be difficult because current evidence leaves room for debate about etiology, diagnosis, and treatment. Fewer studies have evaluated whether online health information can reinforce misconceptions. It can be argued that information with the potential to harm health by reinforcing unhelpful misconceptions ought to be held to a higher standard of evidence.
QUESTIONS/PURPOSES: (1) What is the prevalence and nature of health information in YouTube videos with the potential to reinforce common misconceptions about symptoms and treatment associated with carpal tunnel syndrome (CTS)? (2) What factors (such as the number of views, likes, and subscribers) are associated with Potential Reinforcement of Misconception scores of YouTube videos about CTS?
After removing all personalized data, we searched for the term "carpal tunnel syndrome" on YouTube, reviewed the first 60 English-language videos that discussed the diagnosis and treatment of CTS, and collected available metrics. The primary outcome was the number of statements that could reinforce misconceptions about CTS, rated by two authors using a checklist. As a secondary outcome, we counted the number of statements that could help patients by reorienting or balancing common misconceptions, providing agency, and facilitating decisions, and we subtracted the number of potential misconceptions from this count. A modified version of the DISCERN instrument (a validated scoring system designed to gauge the quality and reliability of health information) was used to evaluate each video. We sought factors associated with the Potential Reinforcement of Misconception score-in both the negative-only and combined (positive and negative) variations-accounting for various YouTube metrics (such as the number of views, number of likes and dislikes, and duration) and the modified DISCERN score. The interrater reliability was excellent for both the Potential Reinforcement of Misconceptions checklist (ICC = 0.97; Pearson correlation [r] = 0.97) and DISCERN information quality score (ICC = 0.96; r = 0.97).
Seventy-eight percent of the YouTube videos (47 of 60 videos) contained at least one statement that could reinforce common misconceptions about CTS. The median number of potentially misconception-reinforcing statements was two (range one to three), with the most common statements being that CTS is caused by hand use (38%; 23 of 60 videos) and that splints can alter the natural history of the disease (37%; 22 videos). Videos that were more popular (higher number of views or likes) did not contain less potential reinforcement of misconceptions. In the multivariable analysis, we found a strong association between the DISCERN score and the CTS Potential Reinforcement of Misconceptions score (regression coefficient = 0.67; 95% CI 0.22-1.2; partial r2 = 0.13; p = 0.004) and a lower number of subscribers (calculated per one million subscribers: regression coefficient = -0.91; 95% CI -1.8 to -0.023; p = 0.045).
Potential reinforcement of misconceptions is prevalent in YouTube videos about CTS, more so in videos with lower information quality scores.
Online health information should be held to a standard of accuracy (alignment with best evidence), and where such evidence leaves room for debate, it should be held to a standard by which unhealthy misconceptions are not reinforced.
已有研究关注了在线健康信息的完整性和对证据的遵循情况,这可能具有一定难度,因为目前的证据仍留有空间,供人们对病因、诊断和治疗进行辩论。但很少有研究评估在线健康信息是否会强化错误观念。有人认为,那些可能通过强化无益错误观念来损害健康的信息,应当满足更高的证据标准。
问题/目的:(1)关于腕管综合征(CTS)相关症状和治疗的常见错误观念,YouTube 视频中可能强化这些错误观念的健康信息的流行程度和性质如何?(2)YouTube 视频中与 CTS 相关的潜在强化错误观念评分与哪些因素(如观看次数、点赞数和订阅数)相关?
在删除所有个人数据后,我们在 YouTube 上搜索了“腕管综合征”一词,查阅了前 60 个讨论 CTS 诊断和治疗的英语视频,并收集了可用指标。主要结局是使用检查表由两位作者评估可强化 CTS 错误观念的陈述数量。作为次要结局,我们计算了可通过重新定位或平衡常见错误观念、提供自主权和促进决策来帮助患者的陈述数量,并从该数量中减去潜在的错误观念数量。使用改良版 DISCERN 工具(一种经过验证的评分系统,用于评估健康信息的质量和可靠性)评估每个视频。我们寻找与潜在强化错误观念评分相关的因素(仅负面评分和(正面和负面)综合评分),同时考虑了各种 YouTube 指标(如观看次数、点赞和不喜欢次数以及时长)和改良版 DISCERN 信息质量评分。潜在强化错误观念检查表的组内相关系数(ICC)为 0.97(皮尔逊相关系数[r] = 0.97),DISCERN 信息质量评分的 ICC 为 0.96(r = 0.97),两种评分的组内相关性均极佳。
YouTube 视频中有 78%(60 个视频中有 47 个)至少包含一条可强化 CTS 常见错误观念的陈述。潜在强化错误观念陈述的中位数为两条(范围为一条到三条),最常见的陈述是 CTS 是由手部使用引起的(38%;60 个视频中有 23 个)和夹板可改变疾病的自然进程(37%;22 个视频)。较受欢迎(观看次数或点赞数较高)的视频并不包含较少的潜在错误观念强化。在多变量分析中,我们发现 DISCERN 评分与 CTS 潜在强化错误观念评分之间存在很强的关联(回归系数 = 0.67;95%置信区间 [CI] 0.22 至 1.2;部分 r2 = 0.13;p = 0.004),且与订阅数较少(每百万订阅者计算:回归系数 = -0.91;95%CI -1.8 至 -0.023;p = 0.045)之间也存在关联。
YouTube 视频中存在强化错误观念的情况,且在信息质量评分较低的视频中更为常见。
在线健康信息应满足准确性标准(与最佳证据一致),而在证据仍留有辩论空间的情况下,应满足不强化不健康错误观念的标准。