4.4 Article

Quality of online information about migraine headache surgery

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ELSEVIER SCI LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.bjps.2022.06.001

Keywords

Online information; Migraine surgery; Headache surgery; EQIP

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This study evaluated the quality of information available on the web regarding surgical treatment of migraine headache. It found that many sources lacked satisfactory readability in communicating information about migraine and its surgical treatment, emphasizing the need for improvement to enhance patient knowledge.
Migraine headache is a debilitating disease that can lead to severe functional limitations and is the most common primary headache. In more than 30% of cases conservative therapies do not allow the control of symptoms or cause side effects. Peripheral nerve surgery should be considered in non-responsive chronic migraine or suspected peripheral origin. Nowadays Web has become one of the most important sources of knowledge for patients: the information available on the web is not subject to a control of the sources reliability but can influence the patient. The aim of the study is to evaluate the quality of information accessible on the Web about the surgical treatment of migraine headache. Headache OR migraine treatment, headache OR migraine surgery were the keywords used on two main search engines (Google and Yahoo). Among the first 50 websites, 26 were suitable and we divided them into five groups (practitioners, hospitals, healthcare portals, professional societies, encyclopedias). We applied the expanded EQIP (Ensuring Quality Information for Patients) scale: the EQIP scale consists of 36 questions with three sections (content, identification data and structure). Although the overall average score was relatively high (22 out of 36), many lacks information were highlighted: overall, readability was not satisfactory in communicating information regarding migraine and its surgical treatment. Readability should be tested before medical on-line publication, in order to provide for its correct use by the patient and improving migraine knowledge. (c) 2022 British Association of Plastic, Reconstructive and Aesthetic Surgeons. Published by Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.

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