Abstract

ObjectivesThe purpose of this study is to conduct the first bibliometric analysis which examines eHealth communication technologies in prostate cancer care, and the utilization of internet-based health information and communication technology by men with prostate cancer. MethodsOriginal articles were extracted from the Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-E) on Web of Science (WOS) and analyzed concerning their distributions. Quantitative guidance directed investigation of findings from previous studies and trending issues within the field. The WOS, VOSViewer and CiteSpace IV were used for information analysis. Results302 articles were included in the final analysis. There has been a 165 % increase in productivity over the past decade. The leading country by publication was the USA (145 articles = 48.02 %). Journals which published the highest number of original articles were the Journal of Medical Internet Research (6.95 %), and Patient Education and Counseling (4.64 %). Discussion and practice implicationsThe field of research which examines utilization and impacts of internet-based health information on men with prostate cancer is growing and diverse. Research frontiers are ‘Information quality and diversity’, ‘eHealth literacy’, ‘decision making’, and ‘survivorship and advanced disease’. Clinicians should be aware of several significant limitations which exist within the current field of research.

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