Abstract

Medical educators and patients are turning to YouTube to teach and learn about medical conditions. These videos are from authors whose credibility cannot be verified & are not peer reviewed. As a result, studies that have analyzed the educational content of YouTube have reported dismal results. These studies have been unable to exclude videos created by questionable sources and for non-educational purposes. We hypothesize that medical education YouTube videos, authored by credible sources, are of high educational value and appropriately suited to educate the public. Credible videos about cardiovascular diseases were identified using the Mayo Clinic's Center for Social Media Health network. Content in each video was assessed by the presence/absence of 7 factors. Each video was also evaluated for understandability using the Suitability Assessment of Materials (SAM). User engagement measurements were obtained for each video. A total of 607 videos (35 hours) were analyzed. Half of all videos contained 3 educational factors: treatment, screening, or prevention. There was no difference between the number of educational factors present & any user engagement measurement (p NS). SAM scores were higher in videos whose content discussed more educational factors (p<0.0001). However, none of the user engagement measurements correlated with higher SAM scores. Videos with greater educational content are more suitable for patient education but unable to engage users more than lower quality videos. It is unclear if the notion “content is king” applies to medical videos authored by credible organizations for the purposes of patient education on YouTube.

Highlights

  • In recent years medical educators and patients are increasingly turning to YouTube to teach and learn about medical conditions, respectively

  • Since 2007, investigations have reported dismal results regarding the educational content of YouTube [5,7,8,9]

  • We hypothesized that credible healthcare organizations produce many highly educational and suitable medical videos and that the public significantly engages with these videos

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Summary

Introduction

In recent years medical educators and patients are increasingly turning to YouTube to teach and learn about medical conditions, respectively. Without a standardized peer-review process or a method by which credible sources can be identified, searches for videos on YouTube result in an ambiguous mix of educationaland entertainment-focused videos. This dilution is evident in the published scientific literature. Prior investigations have not excluded videos created by questionable sources and for non-educational purposes [8]. Data from these studies do not portray an accurate picture of the educational quality of videos created by organizations focused on patient education. We hypothesized that credible healthcare organizations produce many highly educational and suitable medical videos and that the public significantly engages with these videos

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