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Child Care Health Dev · Mar 2018
ReviewThe variation in quality and content of patient-focused health information on the Internet for otitis media.
- A Joury, A Joraid, F Alqahtani, A Alghamdi, A Batwa, and J M Pines.
- Medical Research Fellowship Program, George Washington University School of Medicine and Health Sciences, Washington, DC, USA.
- Child Care Health Dev. 2018 Mar 1; 44 (2): 221-226.
BackgroundWhen symptoms of otitis media appear, parents and patients often access the Internet for health information. We study the content and quality of health information in parent-patient-focused websites for otitis media.MethodsWe searched the 3 search engines (Google, Yahoo, and Bing) using "otitis media" and "middle ear infection" then reviewed the top 30 hits for each search. We included sites that were focused on providing patient-patient information about otitis media. A variety of instruments were used to assess website content and quality.ResultsIn 35 included websites, there was considerable variation in content, with the average site having 11 out of 15 informational items potentially useful to parents and patients on otitis media (range 4-15). Across included websites, the mean DISCERN score was 47 out of 80 (low to medium quality), 16 (46%) were HONcode certified, and 8 (23%) fulfilled all the JAMA benchmark criteria. The average website was written at a 9th/10th-grade reading level.ConclusionThe content and quality of health information for otitis media in parent-and-patient-focused websites is highly variable. Although easy-to-read, high-quality websites with complete content are available, the average website sites is difficult to read without a high school education and is difficult to use. Consideration should be given to adopting a standard approach for presenting disease-specific information to parents and patients.© 2017 John Wiley & Sons Ltd.
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