4.6 Article

Evaluating public interest in herpes zoster in Germany by leveraging the internet: a retrospective search data analysis

Journal

BMC PUBLIC HEALTH
Volume 23, Issue 1, Pages -

Publisher

BMC
DOI: 10.1186/s12889-023-16463-4

Keywords

Herpes zoster; Postherpetic neuralgia; Search engine; Internet; Infodemiology

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This study analyzed internet search data for herpes zoster (HZ) in Germany to evaluate public interest in the disease and factors that influence search behavior. The study found that search volume increased each year, and there were correlations with population density and physician density.
BackgroundHerpes zoster (HZ) and its complication postherpetic neuralgia (PHN), whose incidence are both expected to increase with an ageing population, have demonstrated high costs on healthcare systems and burden on individual quality of life. Previous studies have shown the possibility of assessing public interest in a disease and factors that influence search behaviour using internet search data. The aim of this study was to analyze internet search data for HZ in Germany to evaluate public interest in the disease and relevant influential temporal and geographic factors that modify search behavior.MethodsGoogle Ads Keyword Planner was used to generate a list of HZ-related keywords including their search volume for Germany as a whole and its sixteen federal states from October 2016 to September 2020. All keywords were qualitatively categorized, and changes over time and correlations with population density, physician density, and vaccination rates were assessed using Welch's ANOVA, Bonferroni correction for post-hoc analyses, and Pearson's correlation.ResultsA total of 1,651 relevant keywords with a search volume of 20,816,210 searches were identified. Overall, national search volume increased each year of the study period with a peak in August 2020. More than half of the total search volume related to general queries (55.1%). The highest average monthly search volumes were observed in the states of Hamburg, Saarland, and Bremen. Average monthly search volume showed strong positive correlations with population density (r = .512, p = .043) and a strong negative correlation with the number of inhabitants per working physician (r = -.689, p = .003).ConclusionsThe study demonstrated that evaluating internet search data is a viable method for assessing public interest in HZ, thereby identifying areas of unmet need to support targeted public health campaigns.

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