Literature DB >> 32526691

Is it compatible with breastfeeding? www.e-lactancia.org: Analysis of visits, user profile and most visited products.

José María Paricio-Talayero1, Desirée Mena-Tudela2, Águeda Cervera-Gasch3, Víctor Manuel González-Chordá3, Yasmin Paricio-Burtin1, Marta Sánchez-Palomares1, Nerea Casas-Maeso4, Silvia Moyano-Pellicer1, Konstantina Giannioti4, Alberto Heart1, Leonardo Landa-Rivera1.   

Abstract

INTRODUCTION: One of the factors to influence abandoning breastfeeding is mothers' use of medications. The www.e-lactancia.org website is a reliable source in Spanish and English for online free-access information about the compatibility of medications with breastfeeding. The aim of this study was to analyse the search profiles, and groups and products, searched the most on this website.
MATERIALS AND METHODS: A retrospective and descriptive study of the e-lactancia.org website during 2014-2018. Google Analytics was used for data collection. The following variables were analysed: number of users and queries; professional profile; country; language; users' and groups' access modes/devices; most searched products.
RESULTS: We found 16,821.559 users and 63,783.866 pages. Of users, 62.7 % were "mother/father", and 31.9 % were health professionals. Visits came mostly from: Spain (25.86 %); Mexico (16.87 %); Argentina (7.99 %); Chile (7.31 %). The preferred access mode and device were organic searches (62.1 %) and mobile phones (73.4 %), respectively. Phytotherapy (14.4 %), antibacterial agents (12.3 %) and NSAIDs (12.3 %) were the most searched groups, and ibuprofen (6.25 %) was the most popular product.
CONCLUSION: Users and consultations in e-lactation increased significantly during the study period. Mothers/fathers were the main website users, followed by health professionals. The main consulted groups were antibacterial agents, NSAIDs and systemic phytotherapy. Ibuprofen, paracetamol and amoxicillin stood out as the most consulted products. These results revealed increase Internet resources use to solve parents and health professionals' breastfeeding doubts. Future research should study how users (parents, health professionals) interact with this information.
Copyright © 2020 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.

Entities:  

Keywords:  Breast feeding; Drug labelling; Information storage and retrieval; Pharmaceutical preparations; Product labelling; Telemedicine

Mesh:

Year:  2020        PMID: 32526691     DOI: 10.1016/j.ijmedinf.2020.104199

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Int J Med Inform        ISSN: 1386-5056            Impact factor:   4.046


  1 in total

1.  The COVID-19 vaccine in women: Decisions, data and gender gap.

Authors:  Desirée Mena-Tudela; Laia Aguilar-Camprubí; Paola Quifer-Rada; José María Paricio-Talayero; Alba Padró-Arocas
Journal:  Nurs Inq       Date:  2021-03-28       Impact factor: 2.658

  1 in total

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