Diverticulosis and Diverticulitis on YouTube: Is Popular Information the Most Reliable?
Maverick H Johnson, Goutham A Nair, Courtney K Mack, Sean O'leary, Chris J Thang, Rui-Min D Mao, Nikhil R Shah, Uma R Phatak

TL;DR
This study finds that professional and health websites on YouTube provide more reliable information about diverticulosis and diverticulitis than independent users, despite higher engagement with the latter.
Contribution
The study evaluates the quality of YouTube content on diverticulosis and diverticulitis using standardized scoring tools and source categorization.
Findings
Professional organizations had the highest DISCERN and Global Quality Scores for their videos.
Entertainment/independent users had the lowest quality scores but higher viewer engagement.
YouTube content on diverticular disease varies widely in quality and reliability.
Abstract
Background Patients utilize online health information to inform their medical decision-making. YouTube is one of the most popular media platforms with abundant health-related resources, yet the quality of the disseminated information remains unclear. This study aims to evaluate the quality and reliability of content pertaining to diverticulosis and diverticulitis on YouTube. Methods One author queried the terms “diverticulosis,” “diverticulitis,” “acute diverticulitis,” and “chronic diverticulitis” on YouTube. The first 50 videos per search were selected for analysis. Duplicates, non-English videos, or procedural content were excluded. Video characteristics including view count, likes, comments, duration, days since upload, view ratio, video power index, and video sources (professional organizations (POs), health information websites (HIWs), and entertainment/independent users…
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Taxonomy
TopicsDiverticular Disease and Complications · Colorectal Cancer Screening and Detection
