TikTok and pediatric nephrology: content quality assessment of videos related to pediatric kidney disease and kidney transplant.

IF 2.6 3区 医学 Q1 PEDIATRICS Pediatric Nephrology Pub Date : 2024-12-01 Epub Date: 2024-07-30 DOI:10.1007/s00467-024-06462-x
Hannah Sturm, Mahie Abdullah, Arshia Anand, Jonah Sethna, Rachel Frank, Laura Castellanos, Pamela Singer, Abby Basalely
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Abstract

Background: Social media platforms such as TikTok™ are key sources of health information for young patients and caregivers. Misinformation is prevalent on TikTok™ across healthcare fields, which can perpetuate false beliefs about medical care. Limited data exists on the reliability of pediatric nephrology TikTok™ content. This study aimed to describe the quality of medical content of TikTok™ Videos (TTVs), related to pediatric kidney disease and transplant.

Methods: TTVs were selected using specific search terms and categorized into pediatric kidney disease and kidney transplant, excluding duplicate and adult-related content. The top 100 TTVs in each category, based on views, were analyzed. TTV characteristics were stratified by account type (physician, non-physician healthcare professional (HCP), non-HCP) and video aim (personal story, education, entertainment). DISCERN scoring, a validated questionnaire evaluating health information reliability, was conducted by 4 independent raters. Inter-rater reliability was assessed using a 2-way random effects model, and differences between content creator types were evaluated using one-way ANOVA and post-Hoc Tukey test.

Results: TTVs had a total of 12.5 million likes and 113.1 million views. Over 70% of videos were created by non-HCPs (n = 147/200). DISCERN scoring revealed low reliability of medical information across content creator types. TTVs created by physicians and non-physician HCPs about kidney disease had significantly higher mean DISCERN scores compared to those created by non-HCPs (2.85, p < 0.001 and 2.48, p = 0.005, respectively).

Conclusions: Educators within the pediatric nephrology community must keep in mind the lack of reliability of medical information available on TikTok™ and coordinate collective efforts to consider utilizing TikTok™ for patient education.

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TikTok 和儿科肾病学:儿科肾病和肾移植相关视频的内容质量评估。
背景:TikTok™ 等社交媒体平台是年轻患者和护理人员获取健康信息的重要来源。在 TikTok™ 上,医疗保健领域的错误信息非常普遍,这可能会使人们对医疗保健产生错误的看法。关于儿科肾病学 TikTok™ 内容可靠性的数据有限。本研究旨在描述 TikTok™ 视频(TTV)中与儿科肾病和移植相关的医疗内容的质量:使用特定的搜索条件选择 TTV,并将其分为儿科肾病和肾移植两类,排除重复和与成人相关的内容。根据浏览量对每个类别中排名前 100 的 TTV 进行分析。根据账户类型(医生、非医生医疗保健专业人员 (HCP)、非医疗保健专业人员)和视频目的(个人故事、教育、娱乐)对 TTV 特征进行了分层。DISCERN 评分是一份评估健康信息可靠性的有效问卷,由 4 名独立评分员进行。采用双向随机效应模型评估评分者之间的可靠性,采用单向方差分析和事后Tukey检验评估内容创作者类型之间的差异:TTV总共获得了1250万个赞和1.131亿次浏览。超过 70% 的视频由非医疗保健人员创建(n = 147/200)。DISCERN 评分显示,不同类型内容创作者的医疗信息可靠性较低。由医生和非医生保健人员制作的有关肾脏疾病的 TTV 的 DISCERN 平均得分明显高于由非保健人员制作的 TTV(2.85,p 结论:DISCERN 平均得分高于由医生和非医生保健人员制作的 TTV(2.85,p 结论:DISCERN 平均得分低于由非保健人员制作的 TTV):儿科肾病学界的教育工作者必须牢记 TikTok™ 上的医疗信息缺乏可靠性,并协调集体努力,考虑利用 TikTok™ 进行患者教育。
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来源期刊
Pediatric Nephrology
Pediatric Nephrology 医学-泌尿学与肾脏学
CiteScore
4.70
自引率
20.00%
发文量
465
审稿时长
1 months
期刊介绍: International Pediatric Nephrology Association Pediatric Nephrology publishes original clinical research related to acute and chronic diseases that affect renal function, blood pressure, and fluid and electrolyte disorders in children. Studies may involve medical, surgical, nutritional, physiologic, biochemical, genetic, pathologic or immunologic aspects of disease, imaging techniques or consequences of acute or chronic kidney disease. There are 12 issues per year that contain Editorial Commentaries, Reviews, Educational Reviews, Original Articles, Brief Reports, Rapid Communications, Clinical Quizzes, and Letters to the Editors.
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