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Published in: International Ophthalmology 5/2018

01-10-2018 | Original Paper

YouTube videos in the English language as a patient education resource for cataract surgery

Authors: Steven S. Bae, Stephanie Baxter

Published in: International Ophthalmology | Issue 5/2018

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Abstract

Purpose

To assess the quality of the content of YouTube videos for cataract surgery patient education.

Setting

Hotel Dieu Hospital, Kingston, Ontario, Canada.

Design

Observational study.

Methods

“Cataract surgery,” “cataract surgery for patients,” and “cataract surgery patient education” were used as search terms. The first two pages of search results were reviewed. Descriptive statistics such as video length and view count were obtained. Two cataract surgeons devised 14 criteria important for educating patients about the procedure. Videos were analyzed based on the presence or absence of these criteria. Videos were also assessed for whether they had a primary commercial intent.

Results

Seventy-two videos were analyzed after excluding 48 videos that were duplicate, irrelevant, or not in English. The majority of videos came from a medical professional (71%) and many depicted a real cataract surgery procedure (43%). Twenty-one percent of the videos had a primary commercial intent to promote a practice or product. Out of a total possible 14 points, the mean number of usefulness criteria satisfied was only 2.28 ± 1.80. There was no significant difference in view count between the most useful videos and other videos (p = 0.94). Videos from medical organizations such as the National Health Service were more useful (p < 0.0001).

Conclusions

Cataract surgery videos are popular on YouTube, but most are not adequately educational. Patients may be receiving biased information from videos created with primary commercial intent. Physicians should be aware of the type of information patients may be accessing on YouTube.
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Metadata
Title
YouTube videos in the English language as a patient education resource for cataract surgery
Authors
Steven S. Bae
Stephanie Baxter
Publication date
01-10-2018
Publisher
Springer Netherlands
Published in
International Ophthalmology / Issue 5/2018
Print ISSN: 0165-5701
Electronic ISSN: 1573-2630
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1007/s10792-017-0681-5

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