Background: Online information gathering can increase patients’ engagement in decisionmaking. The quality of online resources available for monoclonal gammopathy of undetermined significance (MGUS) was evaluated. Methods: 900 websites from Google, Bing, Yahoo, and 150 YouTube videos were assessed. Results: The websites did not differ regarding their search rank or between the search engines. The median time since last update was 24 months. The 86 unique websites showed a medium to poor general quality (JAMA score 3/4, only 8.1% websites with a valid HON certificate). The patient-(user-) focused quality was poor (sum DISCERN score 27/80 points). The reading level was difficult (11th US school grade). The content level was very low (13/50 points). 12.8% of websites contained misleading/wrong facts. Websites provided by scientific/governmental organizations had a higher content level. For the 61 unique videos, the median time since upload was 34 months. The videos showed a medium general quality (HON Foundation score). The patient(user-) focused quality was poor (sum DISCERN score 24 points). The content level was very low (6 points). Conclusion: MGUS-relevant online sources showed a low quality that was provided on a high reading level. Incorporation of quality indices and regular review of online content is warranted.
CITATION STYLE
Kreutzer, E. P., Sauer, S., Kriegsmann, M., Staemmler, H., Egerer, G., & Kriegsmann, K. (2021). Accuracy and reliability of internet resources for information on monoclonal gammopathy of undetermined significance—What information is out there for our patients? Cancers, 13(18). https://doi.org/10.3390/cancers13184508
Mendeley helps you to discover research relevant for your work.