Alyssa Berdnik | 1 Article |
<sec><b>Objectives</b><p>Lyme disease is the most common tick-borne disease. People seek health information on Lyme disease from YouTube<sup>TM</sup> videos. In this study, we investigated if the contents of Lyme disease-related YouTube<sup>TM</sup> videos varied by their sources.</p></sec><sec><b>Methods</b><p>Most viewed English YouTube<sup>TM</sup> videos (n = 100) were identified and manually coded for contents and sources.</p></sec><sec><b>Results</b><p>Within the sample, 40 videos were consumer-generated, 31 were internet-based news, 16 were professional, and 13 were TV news. Compared with consumer-generated videos, TV news videos were more likely to mention celebrities (odds ratio [OR], 10.57; 95% confidence interval [CI], 2.13–52.58), prevention of Lyme disease through wearing protective clothing (OR, 5.63; 95% CI, 1.23–25.76), and spraying insecticides (OR, 7.71; 95% CI, 1.52–39.05).</p></sec><sec><b>Conclusion</b><p>A majority of the most popular Lyme disease-related YouTube<sup>TM</sup> videos were not created by public health professionals. Responsible reporting and creative video-making facilitate Lyme disease education. Partnership with YouTube<sup>TM</sup> celebrities to co-develop educational videos may be a future direction.</p></sec>
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