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Misinformation Persists in Complementary Health: Evaluating the Reliability and Quality of YouTube-Based Information on the Use of Acupuncture for Chronic Pain. | LitMetric

AI Article Synopsis

  • Acupuncture is widely sought for chronic pain treatment, and this study analyzes the quality and accuracy of related content found on YouTube.
  • Researchers assessed 54 popular videos, categorizing them as useful, misleading, or neutral while using established quality assessment tools.
  • Results showed that over half of the videos were useful, with those produced by healthcare institutions scoring higher on quality metrics compared to misleading content primarily made by health media.

Article Abstract

Introduction: Acupuncture is commonly used to treat chronic pain. Patients often access public social media platforms for healthcare information when querying acupuncture. Our study aims to appraise the utility, accuracy, and quality of information available on YouTube, a popular social media platform, on acupuncture for chronic pain treatment.

Methods: Using search terms such as "acupuncture for chronic pain" and "acupuncture pain relief", the top 54 videos by view count were selected. Included videos were >1 minute duration, contained audio in English, had >7000 views, and was related to acupuncture. One primary outcome of interest was categorizing each video's usefulness as useful, misleading, or neither. Another primary outcome of interest was the quality and reliability of each video using validated instruments, including the modified DISCERN (mDISCERN) tool and the Global Quality Scale (GQS). The means were calculated for the video production characteristics, production sources, and mDISCERN and GQS scores. Continuous and categorical outcomes were compared using Student's -test and chi-square test, respectively.

Results: Of the 54 videos, 57.4% were categorized as useful, 14.8% were misleading, and 27.8% were neither. Useful videos had a mean GQS and mDISCERN score of 3.77±0.67 and 3.48±0.63, respectively, while misleading videos had mean GQS and mDISCERN score of 2.50±0.53 and 2.38±0.52, respectively. 41.8% of the useful videos were produced by a healthcare institution while none of the misleading videos were produced by a healthcare institution. However, 87.5% of the misleading videos were produced by health media compared to only 25.8% of useful videos from health media.

Discussion: As patients increasingly depend on platforms like YouTube for trustworthy information on complementary health practices such as acupuncture, our study emphasizes the critical need for more higher-quality videos from unbiased healthcare institutions and physicians to ensure patients are receiving reliable information regarding this topic.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC11032134PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.2147/JPR.S459475DOI Listing

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

chronic pain
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misleading videos
12
videos produced
12
videos
10
complementary health
8
acupuncture chronic
8
social media
8
acupuncture study
8
primary outcome
8
outcome interest
8

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