Quality of Health Information on the Internet for Prostate Cancer

Introduction. To compare (1) the quality of prostate cancer health information on the Internet, (2) the difference in quality between websites appearing earlier or later in the search, and (3) the sources of sponsorship for each of these websites. Materials and methods. The top 150 listed websites o...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Dwayne T. S. Chang, Robert Abouassaly, Nathan Lawrentschuk
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Wiley 2018-01-01
Series:Advances in Urology
Online Access:http://dx.doi.org/10.1155/2018/6705152
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
_version_ 1850170908274065408
author Dwayne T. S. Chang
Robert Abouassaly
Nathan Lawrentschuk
author_facet Dwayne T. S. Chang
Robert Abouassaly
Nathan Lawrentschuk
author_sort Dwayne T. S. Chang
collection DOAJ
description Introduction. To compare (1) the quality of prostate cancer health information on the Internet, (2) the difference in quality between websites appearing earlier or later in the search, and (3) the sources of sponsorship for each of these websites. Materials and methods. The top 150 listed websites on the Google search engine for each of the 11 search terms related to prostate cancer were analysed. Quality was assessed on whether the website conforms to the principles of the Health On the Net Foundation. Each of these websites was then reviewed to determine the main source of sponsorship. Statistical analysis was performed to determine if the proportion of HON accreditation varied among the different cohorts of listed websites and among the 11 search terms used. Results. In total, 1650 websites were analysed. Among these, 10.5% websites were HON-accredited. The proportion of HON-accredited websites for individual search terms ranged from 3.3% to 19.3%. In comparison with the search term of “Prostate cancer,” four search terms had statistically significant odds ratio of the rate of HON accreditation. Websites 51–150 were statistically less likely to have HON accreditation than websites 1–50. The top three website sponsors were journal/universities (28.8%), commercial (28.1%), and physician/surgeon (26.9%). Conclusions. The lack of validated and unbiased websites for prostate cancer is concerning especially with increasing use of the Internet for health information. Websites sponsored or managed by the government and national departments were most likely to provide impartial health information for prostate cancer. We need to help our patients identify valid and unbiased online health resources.
format Article
id doaj-art-ac22e64bd2204b158df3ced309b3e006
institution OA Journals
issn 1687-6369
1687-6377
language English
publishDate 2018-01-01
publisher Wiley
record_format Article
series Advances in Urology
spelling doaj-art-ac22e64bd2204b158df3ced309b3e0062025-08-20T02:20:23ZengWileyAdvances in Urology1687-63691687-63772018-01-01201810.1155/2018/67051526705152Quality of Health Information on the Internet for Prostate CancerDwayne T. S. Chang0Robert Abouassaly1Nathan Lawrentschuk2Department of Urology, Sir Charles Gairdner Hospital, WA, AustraliaUrology Institute, University Hospitals Case Medical Center, Cleveland, OH, USADepartment of Urology, Austin Hospital, VIC, AustraliaIntroduction. To compare (1) the quality of prostate cancer health information on the Internet, (2) the difference in quality between websites appearing earlier or later in the search, and (3) the sources of sponsorship for each of these websites. Materials and methods. The top 150 listed websites on the Google search engine for each of the 11 search terms related to prostate cancer were analysed. Quality was assessed on whether the website conforms to the principles of the Health On the Net Foundation. Each of these websites was then reviewed to determine the main source of sponsorship. Statistical analysis was performed to determine if the proportion of HON accreditation varied among the different cohorts of listed websites and among the 11 search terms used. Results. In total, 1650 websites were analysed. Among these, 10.5% websites were HON-accredited. The proportion of HON-accredited websites for individual search terms ranged from 3.3% to 19.3%. In comparison with the search term of “Prostate cancer,” four search terms had statistically significant odds ratio of the rate of HON accreditation. Websites 51–150 were statistically less likely to have HON accreditation than websites 1–50. The top three website sponsors were journal/universities (28.8%), commercial (28.1%), and physician/surgeon (26.9%). Conclusions. The lack of validated and unbiased websites for prostate cancer is concerning especially with increasing use of the Internet for health information. Websites sponsored or managed by the government and national departments were most likely to provide impartial health information for prostate cancer. We need to help our patients identify valid and unbiased online health resources.http://dx.doi.org/10.1155/2018/6705152
spellingShingle Dwayne T. S. Chang
Robert Abouassaly
Nathan Lawrentschuk
Quality of Health Information on the Internet for Prostate Cancer
Advances in Urology
title Quality of Health Information on the Internet for Prostate Cancer
title_full Quality of Health Information on the Internet for Prostate Cancer
title_fullStr Quality of Health Information on the Internet for Prostate Cancer
title_full_unstemmed Quality of Health Information on the Internet for Prostate Cancer
title_short Quality of Health Information on the Internet for Prostate Cancer
title_sort quality of health information on the internet for prostate cancer
url http://dx.doi.org/10.1155/2018/6705152
work_keys_str_mv AT dwaynetschang qualityofhealthinformationontheinternetforprostatecancer
AT robertabouassaly qualityofhealthinformationontheinternetforprostatecancer
AT nathanlawrentschuk qualityofhealthinformationontheinternetforprostatecancer