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. 2003 Oct 10;5(4):e24.
doi: 10.2196/jmir.5.4.e24.

What are patients seeking when they turn to the Internet? Qualitative content analysis of questions asked by visitors to an orthopaedics Web site

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What are patients seeking when they turn to the Internet? Qualitative content analysis of questions asked by visitors to an orthopaedics Web site

Kristen S Shuyler et al. J Med Internet Res. .

Abstract

Background: More people than ever are turning to the Internet for health-related information, and recent studies indicate that the information patients find online directly affects the decisions they make about their health care. Little is known about the information needs or actual search behavior of people who use the Internet for health information.

Objective: This study analyzes what people search for when they use a health-education Web site offering information about arthritis, orthopaedics, and sports-medicine topics. Additionally, it determines who is performing these searches: is it patients, friends or relatives of patients, or neither? Finally, it examines the similarities and differences among questions submitted by Web site visitors from different countries.

Methods: Content analysis was performed on 793 free-text search queries submitted to a patient-education Web site owned and operated by the Department of Orthopaedics and Sports Medicine at the University of Washington Medical Center. The 793-query data set was coded into 3 schemes: (1) the purpose of the query, (2) the topic of the query, and (3) the relationship between the asker of the query and the patient. We determined the country from which each query was submitted by analyzing the Internet Protocol addresses associated with the queries.

Results: The 5 most frequent reasons visitors searched the Web site were to seek: (1) information about a condition, (2) information about treatment, (3) information about symptoms, (4) advice about symptoms, and (5) advice about treatment. We were able to determine the relationship between the person submitting the query and the patient in question for 178 queries. Of these, the asker was the patient in 140 cases, and the asker was a friend or relative of the patient in 38 cases. The queries were submitted from 34 nations, with most coming from the United States, Australia, the United Kingdom, and Canada. When comparing questions submitted from the United States versus those from all other countries, the 3 most frequent types of questions were the same for both groups (and were the top 3 question types listed above).

Conclusions: These results provide the University of Washington Department of Orthopaedics and Sports Medicine, as well as other organizations that provide health-information Web sites, with data about what people around the world are seeking when they turn to the Internet for health information. If Web site managers can adapt their health-information Web sites in response to these findings, patients may be able to find and use Internet-based health information more successfully, enabling them to participate more actively in their health care.

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Conflict of interest statement

Ms. Shuyler was funded by the University of Washington Department of Orthopaedics and Sports Medicine and the University of Washington Program for Educational Transformation Through Technology (PETTT), and was the content manager for the Web site being studied while completing this research. Currently, she is funded by the University of Washington Department Program for Educational Transformation Through Technology. Ms. Knight was funded by the University of Washington Program for Educational Transformation Through Technology. Because Ms. Shuyler was working with the Web site at the time of the research, she may have some stake in the way it is presented to the public. However, the nature of this article was to explore the information needs of our users, not evaluate the Web site itself.

Figures

Figure 1
Figure 1
Web site search-box page
Figure 2
Figure 2
Web site search-results page

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