Content and Quality of Websites for Patients With Chronic Kidney Disease: An Environmental Scan Journal Articles uri icon

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abstract

  • Background: Although numerous websites for patients with chronic kidney disease (CKD) are available, little is known about their content and quality. Objective: To evaluate the quality of CKD websites, and the degree to which they align with information needs identified by patients with CKD. Methods: We identified websites by entering “chronic kidney disease” in 3 search engines: Google.com (with regional variants for Australia, Canada, the United Kingdom, and the United States), Bing.com, and Yahoo.com. We included the first 50 unique English-language sites from each search. We evaluated website content using a 30-point scale comprising 8 priority content domains identified by patients with CKD ( understanding CKD, diet, symptoms, medications, mental/physical health, finances, travel, and work/school). We used standardized tools to evaluate usability, reliability, and readability (DISCERN, HONcode, LIDA, Reading Ease, and Reading Grade Level). Two reviewers independently conducted the search, screen, and evaluation. Results: Of the 2093 websites identified, 115 were included. Overall, sites covered a mean (SD) of 29% (17.8) of the CKD content areas. The proportion of sites covering content related to understanding CKD, symptoms, and diet was highest (97%, 80%, and 72%, respectively). The proportion of sites covering travel, finances, and work/school content was lowest (22%, 12%, and 12%, respectively). The mean (SD) scores for DISCERN, LIDA and HONcode were 68% (14.6), 71% (14.4), and 75% (17.2), respectively, considered above average for usability and reliability. The mean (SD) Reading Grade Level was 10.6 (2.8) and Reading Ease was 49.8 (14.4), suggesting poor readability. Conclusions: Although many CKD web sites were of reasonable quality, their readability was poor. Furthermore, most sites covered less than 30% of the content patients identified as important for CKD self-management. These results will inform content gaps in internet-accessible information on CKD self-management that should be addressed by future eHealth web-based tools.

authors

  • Smekal, Michelle
  • Gil, Sarah
  • Donald, Maoliosa
  • Beanlands, Heather
  • Straus, Sharon
  • Herrington, Gwen
  • Sparkes, Dwight
  • Harwood, Lori
  • Tong, Allison
  • Grill, Allan
  • Tu, Karen
  • Waldvogel, Blair
  • Large, Chantel
  • Large, Claire
  • Novak, Marta
  • James, Matthew
  • Elliott, Meghan
  • Delgado, Maria
  • Brimble, Scott
  • Samuel, Susan
  • Hemmelgarn, Brenda R

publication date

  • January 2019