ISAKOS Congress 2021

2021 ISAKOS Biennial Congress ePoster

 

How Reliable Is Dr. Google? A Systematic Review Evaluating Information Available On The Internet For Common Orthopedic Sports Medicine Terms

Ilona Schwarz, MS, Boulder, CO UNITED STATES
Darby Adele Houck, BA, Boulder, CO UNITED STATES
John W. Belk, BA, Boulder, CO UNITED STATES
Jack C Hop, BA, Colorado Springs, Colorado UNITED STATES
Jonathan T. Bravman, MD, Denver, CO UNITED STATES

University of Colorado School of Medicine, Aurora, CO, UNITED STATES

FDA Status Not Applicable

Summary

Doctors can and should play an active role in closing the gap between the level of health literacy of their patients and that of most common online resources.

ePosters will be available shortly before Congress

Abstract

Purpose

To conduct a systematic review of studies evaluating the quality and content of internet-based information available for common orthopedic sports medicine diagnoses.

Methods

A search of PubMed, Embase, and Cochrane databases following PRISMA guidelines was performed. All English-language literature published from 2010-2020 discussing information quality pertaining to orthopedic sports medicine terms are included. Outcomes included the search engines used, number and type of websites evaluated, platform, and quality scoring metrics. Descriptive statistics are presented.

Results

This review includes 21 studies. Of them, three evaluated both the upper and lower extremity. Twelve focused on the upper and lower extremity, most commonly rotator cuff tears (3/12) and/or ACL pathologies (7/12). The most common engines were Google (18/21), Bing (16/21), Yahoo (16/21), YouTube (3/21), Ask (3/21), and AOL (2/21). The average number of media files assessed per study was 87±55. Website quality was assessed with DISCERN (7/21), Flesch-Kincaid (9/21), Health On The Net (HON) (7/21), and/or JAMA Benchmark (7/21) scores. YouTube was evaluated with JAMA Benchmark Scores (1.74±1.00). Image quality was reported in two studies and varied with search terminology.

Conclusion

The results of this systematic review suggest that physicians should improve the quality of online information and encourage patients to access credible sources when doing their own research. Doctors can and should play an active role in closing the gap between the level of health literacy of their patients and that of most common online resources.