Literature DB >> 30972481

Parental internet search in the field of pediatric orthopedics.

Christian-Dominik Peterlein1, Maren Bosch2, Nina Timmesfeld3, Susanne Fuchs-Winkelmann2.   

Abstract

Parents whose children are affected by systemic diseases, anomalies, deformities, or further orthopedic defective positions use the Internet to increase their knowledge. However, there have been few studies that focus, as this one does, on Internet enquiries done before the parents contact the pediatric orthopedic surgeon. This study analyzed data gathered through a standardized questionnaire on general habits of Internet use, parents' hardware, age, and educational background of the parents. A total of 521 questionnaires were completed for a response rate of 96%. One-quarter of parents (n = 127) attended the consultation because of a gait anomaly or foot deformity, followed by children with DDH (20%, n = 99), clubfoot (9%, n = 47), and scoliosis (6%, n = 29). Parents of children with clubfoot were especially likely to look for health information online (84%, n = 38), followed by parents of children with scoliosis (69%, n = 20), with DDH (67%, n = 66), and with foot deformity/gait anomaly (49%, n = 62). Most people (97%, n = 295) using the Internet for health research purposes made use of a search engine. Concerning use of social media, respondents with clubfoot children were the most numerous (38%, n = 18). There were 35 parents who intended to discuss the results of their Internet research with the pediatric orthopedic surgeon. Most (84%, n = 254) of the respondents who used the Internet for health research planned to do so again.
Conclusion: This study documented that the Internet is an important and popular source of information for parents or caregivers in the field of pediatric orthopedics.Level of evidence: Level II; prospective study What is known: •Parents and caregivers often search the Internet for information, particularly before an upcoming operation in the field of orthopedic disorders. What is new: •This study provides recent data on parental Internet research in a large study population.

Entities:  

Keywords:  Cerebral palsy; Clubfoot; DDH; Internet; Pediatric orthopedics; Scoliosis; Social media; Study

Mesh:

Year:  2019        PMID: 30972481     DOI: 10.1007/s00431-019-03369-w

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Eur J Pediatr        ISSN: 0340-6199            Impact factor:   3.183


  2 in total

1.  Readability assessment of patient educational materials for pediatric spinal deformity from top academic orthopedic institutions.

Authors:  Christopher Michel; Christopher Dijanic; George Abdelmalek; Suleiman Sudah; Daniel Kerrigan; George Gorgy; Praveen Yalamanchili
Journal:  Spine Deform       Date:  2022-07-11

Review 2.  Scoliosis surgery in social media: a natural language processing approach to analyzing the online patient perspective.

Authors:  Calista L Dominy; Varun Arvind; Justin E Tang; Christopher P Bellaire; Sara Diana Pasik; Jun S Kim; Samuel K Cho
Journal:  Spine Deform       Date:  2021-10-28
  2 in total

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