PURPOSE: Patients continually seek information regarding the etiology, diagnosis, management and treatment of bladder cancer. The Internet has a growing number of health web sites and it is a tremendous resource for medical information. We examined the accuracy and completeness of bladder cancer sites on the World Wide Web. MATERIALS AND METHODS: Internet searching was performed by retrieving the first 30 universal resource locators from 8 popular search engines using the search term bladder cancer. A total of 38 independent web sites were evaluated. Other sites were inaccessible, duplicates or only contained linked pages. Two reviewers evaluated the accuracy and completeness of information using a predetermined 41-point checklist rating instrument that evaluated essential information related to bladder cancer. The kappa statistic was used to evaluate interrater variability. RESULTS: The mean kappa statistic for evaluable variables was 0.70. Most nonevaluable variables had excellent agreement, indicating good overall interrater reliability. No rating factor was present on 100% of sites. Eight factors were present and accurate on 80% to 90% of web pages and related to signs/symptoms, risk factors, diagnostic tests and treatment of early stage disease. Six factors were inaccurate on 32% of sites, including incidence (7), staging (3), recurrence (1), and treatment of early invasive (1) and metastatic (1) disease. CONCLUSIONS: Bladder cancer information retrieved from the majority of medical web sites was incomplete. However, general information relating to presentation, diagnosis, staging and treatment of low stage disease was present and accurate on most sites. Although inaccurate information was detected on 32% of the sites, it tended to be related to outdated information. It is reasonable to refer patients to select comprehensive web sites to obtain pertinent information about bladder cancer.
PURPOSE:Patients continually seek information regarding the etiology, diagnosis, management and treatment of bladder cancer. The Internet has a growing number of health web sites and it is a tremendous resource for medical information. We examined the accuracy and completeness of bladder cancer sites on the World Wide Web. MATERIALS AND METHODS: Internet searching was performed by retrieving the first 30 universal resource locators from 8 popular search engines using the search term bladder cancer. A total of 38 independent web sites were evaluated. Other sites were inaccessible, duplicates or only contained linked pages. Two reviewers evaluated the accuracy and completeness of information using a predetermined 41-point checklist rating instrument that evaluated essential information related to bladder cancer. The kappa statistic was used to evaluate interrater variability. RESULTS: The mean kappa statistic for evaluable variables was 0.70. Most nonevaluable variables had excellent agreement, indicating good overall interrater reliability. No rating factor was present on 100% of sites. Eight factors were present and accurate on 80% to 90% of web pages and related to signs/symptoms, risk factors, diagnostic tests and treatment of early stage disease. Six factors were inaccurate on 32% of sites, including incidence (7), staging (3), recurrence (1), and treatment of early invasive (1) and metastatic (1) disease. CONCLUSIONS:Bladder cancer information retrieved from the majority of medical web sites was incomplete. However, general information relating to presentation, diagnosis, staging and treatment of low stage disease was present and accurate on most sites. Although inaccurate information was detected on 32% of the sites, it tended to be related to outdated information. It is reasonable to refer patients to select comprehensive web sites to obtain pertinent information about bladder cancer.
Authors: Johannes Salem; Pia Paffenholz; Christian Bolenz; Melanie von Brandenstein; Angelika Cebulla; Axel Haferkamp; Timur Kuru; Cheryl T Lee; David Pfister; Igor Tsaur; Hendrik Borgmann; Axel Heidenreich Journal: J Cancer Educ Date: 2019-04 Impact factor: 2.037
Authors: Sheila V Kusnoor; Taneya Y Koonce; Mia A Levy; Christine M Lovly; Helen M Naylor; Ingrid A Anderson; Christine M Micheel; Sheau-Chiann Chen; Fei Ye; Nunzia B Giuse Journal: AMIA Jt Summits Transl Sci Proc Date: 2016-07-20
Authors: Trevor Robert Gulbrandsen; Mary Kate Skalitzky; Alan Gregory Shamrock; Burke Gao; Obada Hasan; Benjamin James Miller Journal: JMIR Cancer Date: 2022-03-24