Breast cancer on the world wide web: cross sectional survey of quality of information and popularity of websites
Top Cited Papers
- 9 March 2002
- Vol. 324 (7337), 577-581
- https://doi.org/10.1136/bmj.324.7337.577
Abstract
Objectives: To determine the characteristics of popular breast cancer related websites and whether more popular sites are of higher quality. Design: The search engine Google was used to generate a list of websites about breast cancer. Google ranks search results by measures of link popularity—the number of links to a site from other sites. The top 200 sites returned in response to the query “breast cancer” were divided into “more popular” and “less popular” subgroups by three different measures of link popularity: Google rank and number of links reported independently by Google and by AltaVista (another search engine). Main outcome measures: Type and quality of content. Results: More popular sites according to Google rank were more likely than less popular ones to contain information on ongoing clinical trials (27% v 12%, P=0.01), results of trials (12% v 3%, P=0.02), and opportunities for psychosocial adjustment (48% v 23%, PConclusions: Popularity of websites is associated with type rather than quality of content. Sites that include content correlated with popularity may best meet the public's desire for information about breast cancer. What is already known on this topic Patients are using the world wide web to search for health information Breast cancer is one of the most popular search topics Characteristics of popular websites may reflect the information needs of patients What this study adds Type rather than quality of content correlates with popularity of websites Measures of quality correlate with accuracy of medical informationKeywords
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