Publication

Qualitative Assessment of Medical Information on YouTube: A Multilingual Comparison of Common Urological Conditions

Journal Paper/Review - Jul 21, 2021

Units
PubMed
Doi

Citation
Pratsinis M, Babst C, Langenauer J, Schmid H, Piller A, Neuenschwander A, Betschart P. Qualitative Assessment of Medical Information on YouTube: A Multilingual Comparison of Common Urological Conditions. Urol Int 2021; 105:757-763.
Type
Journal Paper/Review (English)
Journal
Urol Int 2021; 105
Publication Date
Jul 21, 2021
Issn Electronic
1423-0399
Pages
757-763
Brief description/objective

INTRODUCTION
Patients nowadays often search video-sharing platforms for online patient education materials. Since previous assessments of urological videos were limited to English, we systematically assessed the quality of videos on treatment of benign prostatic hyperplasia (BPH), prostate cancer (PCa), and urinary stone disease (USD) in 4 different languages on YouTube using validated instruments.

METHODS
The search for videos on YouTube addressing treatment options of BPH, PCa, and USD was performed in October 2020 in -English, French, German, and Italian. Assessed parameters included basic data (e.g., number of views), grade of misinformation, and reporting of conflicts of interest. Quality of content was analyzed using the validated DISCERN questionnaire. Data were analyzed using descriptive statistics.

RESULTS
A total of 240 videos (60 videos in each language) were analyzed. Videos on USD in English had the highest number of views (median views 271,878 [65,313-2,513,007]). The median overall quality of videos assessed showed a moderate quality (2.5-3.4 points out of 5 points for DISCERN item 16). Median total DISCERN score of all videos divided by language showed very similar results: English (39.75 points), French (38 points), German (39.5 points), and Italian (39 points). Comparing the different diseases, videos about BPH showed the highest median scores, especially in German language (median score 43.25 points).

CONCLUSIONS
Videos concerning the treatment of BPH, PCa, and USD have a low to moderate quality of content, with no differences seen between the languages assessed. These findings further support the notion of improved patient information materials on video platforms such as YouTube.