| Literature DB >> 26769342 |
Gabriele Sak1, Nicola Diviani2,3, Ahmed Allam4, Peter J Schulz2.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: The exponential increase in health-related online platforms has made the Internet one of the main sources of health information globally. The quality of health contents disseminated on the Internet has been a central focus for many researchers. To date, however, few comparative content analyses of pro- and anti-vaccination websites have been conducted, and none of them compared the quality of information. The main objective of this study was therefore to bring new evidence on this aspect by comparing the quality of pro- and anti-vaccination online sources.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2016 PMID: 26769342 PMCID: PMC4714533 DOI: 10.1186/s12889-016-2722-9
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Public Health ISSN: 1471-2458 Impact factor: 3.295
Fig. 1Systems and sub-sets of categories
Online vaccination information quality indices
| Webpage design | Interactivity | Health-related content | Vaccination-specific content |
|---|---|---|---|
| • Functioning of links (first 3)a
| • Interactivity presence and requirementsa
| • Presence of title | • Disease information |
aQuality categories holding values that need to be recoded along with the dichotomous values 0 = not stated/ not avaliable/ not detected/poor; and 1 = stated/ available/ detected/ valuable
bDiscarded category after inter-coder reliability tests
Fig. 2Average health-related content index scores obtained by the three different sub-sets of the sample
Fig. 3Average total aggregated quality index scores obtained by the three sub sets of webpages