Exploring Urological Malignancies on Pinterest: Content Analysis.
Date
2022-08-22Journal
JMIR CancerPublisher
JMIR PublicationsType
Article
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Background: Pinterest is a visually oriented social media platform with over 250 million monthly users. Previous studies have found misinformative content on genitourinary malignancies to be broadly disseminated on YouTube; however, no study has assessed the quality of this content on Pinterest. Objective: Our objective was to evaluate the quality, understandability, and actionability of genitourinary malignancy content on Pinterest. Methods: We examined 540 Pinterest posts or pins, using the following search terms: “bladder cancer,” “kidney cancer,” “prostate cancer,” and “testicular cancer.” The pins were limited to English language and topic-specific content, resulting in the following exclusions: bladder (n=88), kidney (n=4), prostate (n=79), and testicular cancer (n=10), leaving 359 pins as the final analytic sample. Pinterest pins were classified based on publisher and perceived race or ethnicity. Content was assessed using 2 validated grading systems: DISCERN quality criteria and the Patient Education Materials Assessment Tool. The presence of misinformation was evaluated using a published Likert scale ranging from 1=none to 5=high. Results: Overall, 359 pins with a total of 8507 repins were evaluated. The primary publisher of genitourinary malignancy pins were health and wellness groups (n=162, 45%). Across all genitourinary malignancy pins with people, only 3% (n=7) were perceived as Black. Additionally, Asian (n=2, 1%) and Latinx (n=1, 0.5%) individuals were underrepresented in all pins. Nearly 75% (n=298) of the pins had moderate- to poor-quality information. Misinformative content was apparent in 4%-26% of all genitourinary cancer pins. Understandability and actionability were poor in 55% (n=198) and 100% (n=359) of the pins, respectively. Conclusions: On Pinterest, the majority of the urological oncology patient-centric content is of low quality and lacks diversity. This widely used, yet unregulated platform has the ability to influence consumers’ health knowledge and decision-making. Ultimately, this can lead to consumers making suboptimal medical decisions. Moreover, our findings demonstrate underrepresentation across many racial and ethnic groups. Efforts should be made to ensure the dissemination of diverse, high-quality, and accurate health care information to the millions of users on Pinterest and other social media platforms.Rights/Terms
©Amber S Herbert, Naeemul Hassan, Rena D Malik, Stacy Loeb, Akya Myrie. Originally published in JMIR Cancer (https://cancer.jmir.org), 22.08.2022.Keyword
Pinterestaccuracy
bladder cancer
content
genitourinary
information
kidney cancer
malignancy
misinformation
oncology
prostate cancer
quality
social media
testicular cancer
urological cancer
Identifier to cite or link to this item
http://hdl.handle.net/10713/19609ae974a485f413a2113503eed53cd6c53
10.2196/36244
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