Cargando…

Quantifying the Quality of Web-Based Health Information on Student Health Center Websites Using a Software Tool: Design and Development Study

BACKGROUND: The internet has become a major source of health information, especially for adolescents and young adults. Unfortunately, inaccurate, incomplete, or outdated health information is widespread on the web. Often adolescents and young adults turn to authoritative websites such as the student...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Kulkarni, Anagha, Wong, Mike, Belsare, Tejasvi, Shah, Risha, Yu Yu, Diana, Coskun, Bera, Holschuh, Carrie, Kakar, Venoo, Modrek, Sepideh, Smirnova, Anastasia
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: JMIR Publications 2022
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8851325/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35107423
http://dx.doi.org/10.2196/32360
_version_ 1784652799348310016
author Kulkarni, Anagha
Wong, Mike
Belsare, Tejasvi
Shah, Risha
Yu Yu, Diana
Coskun, Bera
Holschuh, Carrie
Kakar, Venoo
Modrek, Sepideh
Smirnova, Anastasia
author_facet Kulkarni, Anagha
Wong, Mike
Belsare, Tejasvi
Shah, Risha
Yu Yu, Diana
Coskun, Bera
Holschuh, Carrie
Kakar, Venoo
Modrek, Sepideh
Smirnova, Anastasia
author_sort Kulkarni, Anagha
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: The internet has become a major source of health information, especially for adolescents and young adults. Unfortunately, inaccurate, incomplete, or outdated health information is widespread on the web. Often adolescents and young adults turn to authoritative websites such as the student health center (SHC) website of the university they attend to obtain reliable health information. Although most on-campus SHC clinics comply with the American College Health Association standards, their websites are not subject to any standards or code of conduct. In the absence of quality standards or guidelines, monitoring and compliance processes do not exist for SHC websites. Thus, there is no oversight of the health information published on SHC websites by any central governing body. OBJECTIVE: The aim of this study is to develop, describe, and validate an open-source software that can effectively and efficiently assess the quality of health information on SHC websites in the United States. METHODS: Our cross-functional team designed and developed an open-source software, QMOHI (Quantitative Measures of Online Health Information), that assesses information quality for a specified health topic from all SHC websites belonging to a predetermined list of universities. The tool was designed to compute 8 different quality metrics that quantify various aspects of information quality based on the retrieved text. We conducted and reported results from 3 experiments that assessed the QMOHI tool in terms of its scalability, generalizability in health topics, and robustness to changes in universities’ website structure. RESULTS: Empirical evaluation has shown the QMOHI tool to be highly scalable and substantially more efficient than manually assessing web-based information quality. The tool’s runtime was dominated by network-related tasks (98%), whereas the metric computations take <2 seconds. QMOHI demonstrated topical versatility, evaluating SHC website information quality for four disparate and broad health topics (COVID, cancer, long-acting reversible contraceptives, and condoms) and two narrowly focused topics (hormonal intrauterine device and copper intrauterine device). The tool exhibited robustness, correctly measuring information quality despite changes in SHC website structure. QMOHI can support longitudinal studies by being robust to such website changes. CONCLUSIONS: QMOHI allows public health researchers and practitioners to conduct large-scale studies of SHC websites that were previously too time- and cost-intensive. The capability to generalize broadly or focus narrowly allows a wide range of applications of QMOHI, allowing researchers to study both mainstream and underexplored health topics. QMOHI’s ability to robustly analyze SHC websites periodically promotes longitudinal investigations and allows QMOHI to be used as a monitoring tool. QMOHI serves as a launching pad for our future work that aims to develop a broadly applicable public health tool for web-based health information studies with potential applications far beyond SHC websites.
format Online
Article
Text
id pubmed-8851325
institution National Center for Biotechnology Information
language English
publishDate 2022
publisher JMIR Publications
record_format MEDLINE/PubMed
spelling pubmed-88513252022-03-10 Quantifying the Quality of Web-Based Health Information on Student Health Center Websites Using a Software Tool: Design and Development Study Kulkarni, Anagha Wong, Mike Belsare, Tejasvi Shah, Risha Yu Yu, Diana Coskun, Bera Holschuh, Carrie Kakar, Venoo Modrek, Sepideh Smirnova, Anastasia JMIR Form Res Original Paper BACKGROUND: The internet has become a major source of health information, especially for adolescents and young adults. Unfortunately, inaccurate, incomplete, or outdated health information is widespread on the web. Often adolescents and young adults turn to authoritative websites such as the student health center (SHC) website of the university they attend to obtain reliable health information. Although most on-campus SHC clinics comply with the American College Health Association standards, their websites are not subject to any standards or code of conduct. In the absence of quality standards or guidelines, monitoring and compliance processes do not exist for SHC websites. Thus, there is no oversight of the health information published on SHC websites by any central governing body. OBJECTIVE: The aim of this study is to develop, describe, and validate an open-source software that can effectively and efficiently assess the quality of health information on SHC websites in the United States. METHODS: Our cross-functional team designed and developed an open-source software, QMOHI (Quantitative Measures of Online Health Information), that assesses information quality for a specified health topic from all SHC websites belonging to a predetermined list of universities. The tool was designed to compute 8 different quality metrics that quantify various aspects of information quality based on the retrieved text. We conducted and reported results from 3 experiments that assessed the QMOHI tool in terms of its scalability, generalizability in health topics, and robustness to changes in universities’ website structure. RESULTS: Empirical evaluation has shown the QMOHI tool to be highly scalable and substantially more efficient than manually assessing web-based information quality. The tool’s runtime was dominated by network-related tasks (98%), whereas the metric computations take <2 seconds. QMOHI demonstrated topical versatility, evaluating SHC website information quality for four disparate and broad health topics (COVID, cancer, long-acting reversible contraceptives, and condoms) and two narrowly focused topics (hormonal intrauterine device and copper intrauterine device). The tool exhibited robustness, correctly measuring information quality despite changes in SHC website structure. QMOHI can support longitudinal studies by being robust to such website changes. CONCLUSIONS: QMOHI allows public health researchers and practitioners to conduct large-scale studies of SHC websites that were previously too time- and cost-intensive. The capability to generalize broadly or focus narrowly allows a wide range of applications of QMOHI, allowing researchers to study both mainstream and underexplored health topics. QMOHI’s ability to robustly analyze SHC websites periodically promotes longitudinal investigations and allows QMOHI to be used as a monitoring tool. QMOHI serves as a launching pad for our future work that aims to develop a broadly applicable public health tool for web-based health information studies with potential applications far beyond SHC websites. JMIR Publications 2022-02-02 /pmc/articles/PMC8851325/ /pubmed/35107423 http://dx.doi.org/10.2196/32360 Text en ©Anagha Kulkarni, Mike Wong, Tejasvi Belsare, Risha Shah, Diana Yu Yu, Bera Coskun, Carrie Holschuh, Venoo Kakar, Sepideh Modrek, Anastasia Smirnova. Originally published in JMIR Formative Research (https://formative.jmir.org), 02.02.2022. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work, first published in JMIR Formative Research, is properly cited. The complete bibliographic information, a link to the original publication on https://formative.jmir.org, as well as this copyright and license information must be included.
spellingShingle Original Paper
Kulkarni, Anagha
Wong, Mike
Belsare, Tejasvi
Shah, Risha
Yu Yu, Diana
Coskun, Bera
Holschuh, Carrie
Kakar, Venoo
Modrek, Sepideh
Smirnova, Anastasia
Quantifying the Quality of Web-Based Health Information on Student Health Center Websites Using a Software Tool: Design and Development Study
title Quantifying the Quality of Web-Based Health Information on Student Health Center Websites Using a Software Tool: Design and Development Study
title_full Quantifying the Quality of Web-Based Health Information on Student Health Center Websites Using a Software Tool: Design and Development Study
title_fullStr Quantifying the Quality of Web-Based Health Information on Student Health Center Websites Using a Software Tool: Design and Development Study
title_full_unstemmed Quantifying the Quality of Web-Based Health Information on Student Health Center Websites Using a Software Tool: Design and Development Study
title_short Quantifying the Quality of Web-Based Health Information on Student Health Center Websites Using a Software Tool: Design and Development Study
title_sort quantifying the quality of web-based health information on student health center websites using a software tool: design and development study
topic Original Paper
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8851325/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35107423
http://dx.doi.org/10.2196/32360
work_keys_str_mv AT kulkarnianagha quantifyingthequalityofwebbasedhealthinformationonstudenthealthcenterwebsitesusingasoftwaretooldesignanddevelopmentstudy
AT wongmike quantifyingthequalityofwebbasedhealthinformationonstudenthealthcenterwebsitesusingasoftwaretooldesignanddevelopmentstudy
AT belsaretejasvi quantifyingthequalityofwebbasedhealthinformationonstudenthealthcenterwebsitesusingasoftwaretooldesignanddevelopmentstudy
AT shahrisha quantifyingthequalityofwebbasedhealthinformationonstudenthealthcenterwebsitesusingasoftwaretooldesignanddevelopmentstudy
AT yuyudiana quantifyingthequalityofwebbasedhealthinformationonstudenthealthcenterwebsitesusingasoftwaretooldesignanddevelopmentstudy
AT coskunbera quantifyingthequalityofwebbasedhealthinformationonstudenthealthcenterwebsitesusingasoftwaretooldesignanddevelopmentstudy
AT holschuhcarrie quantifyingthequalityofwebbasedhealthinformationonstudenthealthcenterwebsitesusingasoftwaretooldesignanddevelopmentstudy
AT kakarvenoo quantifyingthequalityofwebbasedhealthinformationonstudenthealthcenterwebsitesusingasoftwaretooldesignanddevelopmentstudy
AT modreksepideh quantifyingthequalityofwebbasedhealthinformationonstudenthealthcenterwebsitesusingasoftwaretooldesignanddevelopmentstudy
AT smirnovaanastasia quantifyingthequalityofwebbasedhealthinformationonstudenthealthcenterwebsitesusingasoftwaretooldesignanddevelopmentstudy