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YouTube TM as a source of information on bladder pain syndrome: A contemporary analysis

Authors :
Luigi Napolitano
Marco Capece
Claudia Collà Ruvolo
Gerardo Gerundo
Giuseppe Celentano
Alberto Melchionna
Ferdinando Fusco
Carmine Turco
Massimiliano Creta
Roberto La Rocca
Francesco Trama
Simone Morra
Nicola Longo
Francesco Mangiapia
Gianluigi Califano
Simone Cilio
Vincenzo Mirone
Morra, Simone
Collà Ruvolo, Claudia
Napolitano, Luigi
La Rocca, Roberto
Celentano, Giuseppe
Califano, Gianluigi
Creta, Massimiliano
Capece, Marco
Turco, Carmine
Cilio, Simone
Melchionna, Alberto
Gerundo, Gerardo
Trama, Francesco
Mangiapia, Francesco
Fusco, Ferdinando
Mirone, Vincenzo
Longo, Nicola
Source :
Neurourology and Urodynamics. 41:237-245
Publication Year :
2021
Publisher :
Wiley, 2021.

Abstract

Aim: To evaluate the quality of YouTube™ videos on bladder pain syndrome (BPS) and to investigate whether they can be used as a reliable source of information. Methods: The search term "bladder pain syndrome" was used on YouTubeTM platform. The first 100 videos were selected. Patient Education Materials Assessment Tool for audio-visual content (PEMAT A/V), Global Quality Score (GQS), Misinformation tool, and DISCERN score were used to assess videos' quality content. Pearson's test was used to assess potential correlations between variables. Results: Seventy-nine videos were suitable for the analyses. The median PEMAT A/V Understandability score and PEMAT A/V Actionability score were 66.7% (interquartile range [IQR]: 46.2-100.0) and 75.0% (IQR: 37.5-100.0), respectively. According to GQS, 26 (32.9%), 32 (40.5%), 3 (3.8%), 15 (19.0%), and 3 (3.8%) videos were excellent, good, moderate, generally poor, and poor, respectively. According to Misinformation tool, of all videos, 81% (n = 64), 6.3% (n = 5), 5.1% (n = 4), 5.1% (n = 4), 2.5% (n = 2) had respectively no, very little, moderate, high, and extreme misinformation. The overall median DISCERN score ranged from 5.0 (IQR: 2.0-5.0) to 5.0 (IQR: 5.0-5.0). A positive statistically significant correlation was found between video length and PEMAT A/V Understandability (r = 0.27, p = 0.01), video length and PEMAT A/V Actionability (r = .26, p = 0.02), and video length and DISCERN Question 16 (r = 0.28, p = 0.01). Conclusions: Nowaday, the overall quality of YouTubeTM videos on BPS have been evaluated good according to PEMAT A/V, GQS, Misinformation tool, and DISCERN score. It is possible to assume that YouTubeTM may be considered as a reliable source of information on BPS.

Details

ISSN :
15206777 and 07332467
Volume :
41
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Neurourology and Urodynamics
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....b794895691307c7af5f23894cebff986