TY - JOUR AU - Hanna, Kamal AU - Brennan, David AU - Sambrook, Paul AU - Armfield, Jason PY - 2015 DA - 2015/10/06 TI - Third Molars on the Internet: A Guide for Assessing Information Quality and Readability JO - Interact J Med Res SP - e19 VL - 4 IS - 4 KW - DISCERN KW - health information online KW - Health on the Net Code KW - readability KW - Scientific Information Quality Scale KW - website affiliation KW - website content analysis KW - wisdom teeth AB - Background: Directing patients suffering from third molars (TMs) problems to high-quality online information is not only medically important, but also could enable better engagement in shared decision making. Objectives: This study aimed to develop a scale that measures the scientific information quality (SIQ) for online information concerning wisdom tooth problems and to conduct a quality evaluation for online TMs resources. In addition, the study evaluated whether a specific piece of readability software (Readability Studio Professional 2012) might be reliable in measuring information comprehension, and explored predictors for the SIQ Scale. Methods: A cross-sectional sample of websites was retrieved using certain keywords and phrases such as “impacted wisdom tooth problems” using 3 popular search engines. The retrieved websites (n=150) were filtered. The retained 50 websites were evaluated to assess their characteristics, usability, accessibility, trust, readability, SIQ, and their credibility using DISCERN and Health on the Net Code (HoNCode). Results: Websites’ mean scale scores varied significantly across website affiliation groups such as governmental, commercial, and treatment provider bodies. The SIQ Scale had a good internal consistency (alpha=.85) and was significantly correlated with DISCERN (r=.82, P<.01) and HoNCode (r=.38, P<.01). Less than 25% of websites had SIQ scores above 75%. The mean readability grade (10.3, SD 1.9) was above the recommended level, and was significantly correlated with the Scientific Information Comprehension Scale (r=.45. P<.01), which provides evidence for convergent validity. Website affiliation and DISCERN were significantly associated with SIQ (P<.01) and explained 76% of the SIQ variance. Conclusion: The developed SIQ Scale was found to demonstrate reliability and initial validity. Website affiliation, DISCERN, and HoNCode were significant predictors for the quality of scientific information. The Readability Studio software estimates were associated with scientific information comprehensiveness measures. SN - 1929-073X UR - http://www.i-jmr.org/2015/4/e19/ UR - https://doi.org/10.2196/ijmr.4712 UR - http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/26443470 DO - 10.2196/ijmr.4712 ID - info:doi/10.2196/ijmr.4712 ER -