An audit of the quality of online immunisation information available to Australian parents

Abstract Background The Internet is increasingly a source of health information for parents, who use the Internet alongside health care providers for immunisation information. Concerns have been raised about the reliability of online immunisation information, however to date there has been no audit...

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Main Authors: K. E. Wiley, M. Steffens, N. Berry, J. Leask
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: BMC 2017-01-01
Series:BMC Public Health
Subjects:
Online Access:http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s12889-016-3933-9
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spelling doaj-ee668c4158004d9089f48ac65c61659b2020-11-24T22:07:36ZengBMCBMC Public Health1471-24582017-01-011711910.1186/s12889-016-3933-9An audit of the quality of online immunisation information available to Australian parentsK. E. Wiley0M. Steffens1N. Berry2J. Leask3National Centre for Immunisation Research and Surveillance, The Children’s Hospital at WestmeadSydney School of Public Health, University of SydneySydney School of Public Health, University of SydneySydney School of Public Health, University of SydneyAbstract Background The Internet is increasingly a source of health information for parents, who use the Internet alongside health care providers for immunisation information. Concerns have been raised about the reliability of online immunisation information, however to date there has been no audit of the quality or quantity of what is available to Australian parents. The objective of this study was to address this gap by simulating a general online search for immunisation information, and assessing the quality and quantity of the web sites returned by the search. Methods We used Google trends to identify the most common immunisation search terms used in Australia. The ten most common terms were entered into five search engines and the first ten non-commercial results from each search collated. A quality assessment tool was developed using the World Health Organization Global Advisory Committee on Vaccine Safety (GACVS) criteria for assessing the quality of vaccine safety web sites, and used to assess and score the quality of the sites. Results Seven hundred web pages were identified, of which 514 were duplicates, leaving 186 pages from 115 web sites which were audited. Forty sites did not include human immunisation information, or presented personal opinion about individuals, and were not scored. Of the 75 sites quality scored, 65 (87%) were supportive of immunisation, while 10 (13%) were not supportive. The overall mean quality score was 57/100 (range 14/100 to 92/100). When stratified by pro and anti-vaccination stance, the average quality score for pro-vaccine sites was 61/100, while the average score for anti-vaccine sites was 30/100. Pro-vaccine information could be divided into three content groups: generalist overview with little detail; well-articulated and understandable detail; and lengthy and highly technical explanations. The main area found to be lacking in pro-vaccine sites was lack of transparent authorship. Conclusion Our findings suggest a need for information which is easily found, transparently authored, well-referenced, and written in a way that is easily understood.http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s12889-016-3933-9ImmunisationHealth informationInternet searchOnline information quality
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author K. E. Wiley
M. Steffens
N. Berry
J. Leask
spellingShingle K. E. Wiley
M. Steffens
N. Berry
J. Leask
An audit of the quality of online immunisation information available to Australian parents
BMC Public Health
Immunisation
Health information
Internet search
Online information quality
author_facet K. E. Wiley
M. Steffens
N. Berry
J. Leask
author_sort K. E. Wiley
title An audit of the quality of online immunisation information available to Australian parents
title_short An audit of the quality of online immunisation information available to Australian parents
title_full An audit of the quality of online immunisation information available to Australian parents
title_fullStr An audit of the quality of online immunisation information available to Australian parents
title_full_unstemmed An audit of the quality of online immunisation information available to Australian parents
title_sort audit of the quality of online immunisation information available to australian parents
publisher BMC
series BMC Public Health
issn 1471-2458
publishDate 2017-01-01
description Abstract Background The Internet is increasingly a source of health information for parents, who use the Internet alongside health care providers for immunisation information. Concerns have been raised about the reliability of online immunisation information, however to date there has been no audit of the quality or quantity of what is available to Australian parents. The objective of this study was to address this gap by simulating a general online search for immunisation information, and assessing the quality and quantity of the web sites returned by the search. Methods We used Google trends to identify the most common immunisation search terms used in Australia. The ten most common terms were entered into five search engines and the first ten non-commercial results from each search collated. A quality assessment tool was developed using the World Health Organization Global Advisory Committee on Vaccine Safety (GACVS) criteria for assessing the quality of vaccine safety web sites, and used to assess and score the quality of the sites. Results Seven hundred web pages were identified, of which 514 were duplicates, leaving 186 pages from 115 web sites which were audited. Forty sites did not include human immunisation information, or presented personal opinion about individuals, and were not scored. Of the 75 sites quality scored, 65 (87%) were supportive of immunisation, while 10 (13%) were not supportive. The overall mean quality score was 57/100 (range 14/100 to 92/100). When stratified by pro and anti-vaccination stance, the average quality score for pro-vaccine sites was 61/100, while the average score for anti-vaccine sites was 30/100. Pro-vaccine information could be divided into three content groups: generalist overview with little detail; well-articulated and understandable detail; and lengthy and highly technical explanations. The main area found to be lacking in pro-vaccine sites was lack of transparent authorship. Conclusion Our findings suggest a need for information which is easily found, transparently authored, well-referenced, and written in a way that is easily understood.
topic Immunisation
Health information
Internet search
Online information quality
url http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s12889-016-3933-9
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