Author:
Singh Gurfarmaan,Goel Raghav,Shapira Yinon,Hewitt Joseph,Ovenden Christopher,Selva Dinesh
Abstract
Abstract
Background
To determine the quality and reliability of DCR YouTube videos as patient education resources and identify any associated factors predictive of video quality.
Methods
A YouTube search was conducted using the terms “Dacryocystorhinostomy, DCR, surgery” on 12th of January 2022, with the first 50 relevant videos selected for inclusion. For each video, the following was collected: video hyperlink, title, total views, months since the video was posted, video length, total likes/dislikes, authorship (i.e. surgeon, patient experience or media companies) and number of comments. The videos were graded independently by a resident, a registrar and an oculoplastic surgeon using three validated scoring systems: the Journal of the American Medical Association (JAMA), DISCERN, and Health on the Net (HON).
Results
The average number of video views was 22,992, with the mean length being 488.12 s and an average of 18 comments per video. The consensus JAMA, DISCERN and HON scores were 2.1 ± 0.6, 29.1 ± 8.8 and 2.7 ± 1.0, respectively. This indicated that the included videos were of a low quality, however, only DISCERN scores had good interobserver similarity. Videos posted by surgeons were superior to non-surgeons when considering mean JAMA and HON scores. No other factors were associated with the quality of educational content.
Conclusion
The quality and reliability of DCR related content for patient education is relatively low. Based on this study’s findings, patients should be encouraged to view videos created by surgeons or specialists in preference to other sources on YouTube.
Funder
The University of Adelaide
Publisher
Springer Science and Business Media LLC
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