Lyme Disease and YouTubeTM: A Cross-Sectional Study of Video Contents

Article information

Osong Public Health Res Perspect. 2017;8(4):289-292
Publication date (electronic) : 2017 August 31
doi : https://doi.org/10.24171/j.phrp.2017.8.4.10
aDepartment of Public Health, William Paterson University, Wayne, New Jersey, United States of America
bDepartment of Epidemiology and Environmental Health Sciences, Jiann-Ping Hsu College of Public Health, Georgia Southern University, Statesboro, Georgia, United States of America
cDepartment of Biostatistics, Jiann-Ping Hsu College of Public Health, Georgia Southern University, Statesboro, Georgia, United States of America
dTeachers College, Columbia University, New York City, New York, United States of America
Corresponding author: Isaac Chun-Hai Fung, E-mail: cfung@georgiasouthern.edu
*Corey H. Basch, Lindsay A. Mullican, and Kwanza D. Boone contributed equally to this study as co-first authors.
Received 2017 March 31; Revised 2017 August 07; Accepted 2017 August 14.

Abstract

Objectives

Lyme disease is the most common tick-borne disease. People seek health information on Lyme disease from YouTubeTM videos. In this study, we investigated if the contents of Lyme disease-related YouTubeTM videos varied by their sources.

Methods

Most viewed English YouTubeTM videos (n = 100) were identified and manually coded for contents and sources.

Results

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).

Conclusion

A majority of the most popular Lyme disease-related YouTubeTM videos were not created by public health professionals. Responsible reporting and creative video-making facilitate Lyme disease education. Partnership with YouTubeTM celebrities to co-develop educational videos may be a future direction.

INTRODUCTION

Lyme disease is the most common tick-borne disease, with approximately 300,000 cases diagnosed annually in the United States [1] and approximately 85,000 estimated cases diagnosed annually in Europe [2]. Lyme disease is also present in China, but exact estimates are not available. Meanwhile, Lyme disease is rare in Korea and Japan [2]. Lyme disease is known for different acute and chronic clinical manifestations in humans and it is capable of causing clinical symptoms in dogs, horses and sometimes cattle [1,3]. Common symptoms of acute illness include fever, headache, fatigue, and erythema migrans [1]. Effective health communication can be used to empower individuals to prevent potential acquisition of Lyme disease by avoiding tick-infested areas, wearing protective clothing or repellent, and subsequent timely checking for and correct removal of ticks [1].

Social media disseminates information efficiently, making it crucial for health communication. With over 1 billion users, YouTubeTM is the second most visited website [4]. Many health-related videos are uploaded, searched, and viewed daily [4], but no study to date analyzes Lyme disease-related YouTubeTM videos. Given the large audience of YouTubeTM users and the concern of accuracy regarding disease-related information released on these videos, it is important to know if the videos made by public health professionals reach a wide audience or not.

In this study, we investigated if the contents of Lyme disease-related YouTubeTM videos varied by their sources.

MATERIALS AND METHODS

The approval for this study of Institutional Review Board at William Paterson University was waived since this study did not involve human subjects.

For this study, we adapted a research protocol that was previously established for the study of Zika virus-related YouTubeTM videos [5] to allow for the study of Lyme disease-related videos. YouTube.com was searched with the keyword “Lyme Disease” on September 2, 2016. Videos were sorted by their number of views in descending order. After excluding two videos, one in French and one in Spanish, the 100 most viewed English language Lyme disease-related videos were manually coded for content and sources. Video sources were categorized as (1) consumer-generated (uploaded by non-healthcare-professionals who were members of the general public), (2) professional (uploaded by healthcare professionals), (3) news broadcasted by television networks, and (4) other internet-based news (news clips that were part of an internet-based program rather than one that was aired on network television). The video title, date of upload, URL, length, number of views, and number of thumbs-up and thumbs-down were recorded and analyzed. A random sample of 10 videos out of the sample (n = 100) were double coded; our manual coding was found reliable with 100% agreement.

Statistical analysis was performed in R 3.3.1 through R Studio [6]. Non-parametric methods were used to analyze the video length, number of views, thumbs-up, and thumbs-down. The Kruskal–Wallis H-test was used across categories, and the Nemenyi test was used for pairwise comparisons. Spearman’s rho was used to assess bivariate correlation. Manually coded contents that were binary were analyzed using univariate logistic regression with the video source as the predictor variable.

RESULTS

There were 40 consumer-generated videos, 31 internet-based news videos, 16 professional videos, and 13 TV news videos among the 100 most viewed English videos on Lyme disease. Collectively, they were viewed 10,380,848 times. Consumer-generated videos were viewed 3,231,374 times, accounting for 31.1% of overall views, followed by TV news (2,783,934, 26.8%), internet-based news (2,395,154, 23.1%), and professional news (1,971,286, 19.0%). The difference in distribution of the overall views was marginally statistically significant between the categories (Kruskal–Wallis test, χ2 = 7.98, p = 0.05); however, pairwise comparison revealed no significant difference between the categories.

Compared with amateur-generated videos, TV news videos were more likely to mention or feature a celebrity (odds ratio [OR], 10.57; 95% confidence interval [CI], 2.13–52.58; p = 0.004), to mention Lyme disease prevention through wearing proper clothing (OR, 5.63; 95% CI, 1.23–25.76; p = 0.03), and to mention Lyme disease prevention through spraying insecticides either on clothing or in the environment (OR, 7.71; 95% CI, 1.52–39.05; p = 0.01) (Table 1). Internet-based news videos were 4.3 times as likely as consumer-generated videos to mention non-specific prevention methods (OR, 4.29; 95% CI, 1.19–15.39; p = 0.03). Non-specific prevention methods were defined as mentions of the importance of prevention with little detail (e.g., prepare your home or use caution outside). Further details are presented in the online Supplementary Materials (available at https://doi.org/10.24171/j.phrp.2017.8.4.10).

The OR of different video source categories containing different categories of Lyme disease-related contents as compared to consumer-generated videos

DISCUSSION

Among the 100 most viewed YouTubeTM videos on Lyme disease, 40 were uploaded by amateurs; only 16 were created by healthcare professionals. Prevention of Lyme disease relies primarily on education about personal protection measures, and signs and symptoms of the disease [7]. Most individuals with early-stage Lyme disease respond to antibiotic therapy very well [7]. With over half of low literacy adults who sought health information preferring the internet as their first choice for a source of information [8], the untapped potential of online videos in health communication could not be overstated. Professional sources ensure accurate and valid information dissemination. Our findings suggest the possibility that many Lyme disease-related YouTubeTM videos made by public health professionals are not popular enough to make it to the list of the most viewed 100. Given YouTube’s popularity, the public health implication of our study is that if we want to reach a wider audience with infectious disease prevention messages, more creative video-making might be needed. A future direction that public health professionals can consider is to collaborate with YouTubeTM celebrities who have millions of online subscribers to co-develop interesting videos that educate the public about infectious disease prevention.

There are limitations to this study. The cross-sectional design could not capture the changing numbers of views and other meta-data. The cut-off point of 100 for the most popular videos was arbitrary. Our findings may not be generalizable to the less popular videos. We chose to focus on English videos; videos in other languages might have different contents. We did not code for misinformation, nor did we evaluate video quality, because these were beyond the scope of this study.

In conclusion, Lyme disease-related YouTubeTM videos attracted over 10 million views. Responsible TV news reporting and innovative videos created by healthcare professionals could harness YouTube’s untapped potential and facilitate health education on Lyme disease.

Supplementary Materials

ACKNOWLEDGMENTS

We received no external funding for this project. ICHF received salary support from the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (16IPA1609578). This paper is not part of his CDC-supported research projects. The opinions expressed in this review do not represent the CDC nor the United States Government.

Notes

CONFLICTS OF INTEREST

No potential conflict of interest relevant to this article was reported.

References

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2. Stone BL, Tourand Y, Brissette CA. Brave New Worlds: the expanding universe of Lyme disease. Vector Borne Zoonotic Dis 2017;17:619–29. http://doi.org/10.1089/vbz.2017.2127. 10.1089/vbz.2017.2127. 28727515.
3. Chomel B. Lyme disease. Rev Sci Tech 2015;34:569–76. 10.20506/rst.34.2.2380. 26601457.
4. Sones M, Jackson R, Smith-George JP. Environmental health promotion on a budget: leveraging the power of YouTube to reach millions of people. J Environ Health 2016;79:44–5.
5. Basch CH, Fung IC, Hammond RN, et al. Zika Virus on YouTube: an analysis of english-language video content by source. J Prev Med Public Health 2017;50:133–40. https://doi.org/10.3961/jpmph.16.107. 10.3961/jpmph.16.107. 28372356.
6. RStudio Team. RStudio: Integrated Development for R [Internet] Boston, MA: RStudio Inc; 2017. [cited 2017 Mar 29]. Available from: http://www.rstudio.com/.
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8. Nutbeam D. Health literacy as a public health goal: a challenge for contemporary health education and communication strategies into the 21st century. Health Promot Int 2000;15:259–67. https://doi.org/10.1093/heapro/15.3.259. 10.1093/heapro/15.3.259.

Article information Continued

Table 1

The OR of different video source categories containing different categories of Lyme disease-related contents as compared to consumer-generated videos

Content category OR (95% CI) p-value
A celebrity featured or mentioned
 Internet-based news videos 0.85 (0.13–5.43) 0.86
 Professional videosa
 Television news videos 10.57 (2.13–52.58) 0.004
Borrelia burgdorferi spirochete shown or mentioned
 Internet-based news videos 0.76 (0.28–2.09) 0.59
 Professional videos 0.43 (0.10–1.76) 0.24
 Television news videos 0.83 (0.22–3.17) 0.78
Pain mentioned
 Internet-based news videos 0.59 (0.23–1.52) 0.28
 Professional videos 0.82 (0.26–2.61) 0.73
 Television news videos 0.36 (0.10–1.38) 0.14
Anxiety or fear of diagnosis mentioned
 Internet-based news videos 1.31 (0.17–9.87) 0.79
 Professional videos 4.39 (0.66–29.22) 0.13
 Television news videos 5.70 (0.84–38.88) 0.08
Bull’s-eye rash shown or mentioned
 Internet-based news videos 0.64 (0.24–1.72) 0.38
 Professional videos 0.62 (0.18–2.10) 0.44
 Television news videos 0.60 (0.16–2.28) 0.46
Fatigue symptoms mentioned
 Internet-based news videos 1.24 (0.48–3.19) 0.66
 Professional videos 0.90 (0.27–2.97) 0.86
 Television news videos 1.29 (0.36–4.54) 0.70
Headache symptoms mentioned
 Internet-based news videos 0.68 (0.25–1.86) 0.46
 Professional videos 0.56 (0.15–2.04) 0.38
 Television news videos 0.74 (0.19–2.83) 0.66
Fever symptoms mentioned
 Internet-based news videos 0.68 (0.23–2.00) 0.49
 Professional videos 1.06 (0.30–3.72) 0.93
 Television news videos 1.04 (0.27–4.03) 0.96
Treatment mentioned
 Internet-based news videos 0.61 (0.22–1.69) 0.34
 Professional videos 5.00 (0.58–42.80) 0.14
 Television news videos 1.11 (0.25–4.86) 0.89
Damage to nervous system mentioned
 Internet-based news videos 0.63 (0.21–1.96) 0.43
 Professional videos 2.05 (0.61–6.86) 0.24
 Television news videos 1.65 (0.44–6.14) 0.46
Damage to joints mentioned
 Internet-based news videos 2.20 (0.76–6.40) 0.15
 Professional videos 1.33 (0.34–5.25) 0.68
 Television news videos 1.78 (0.43–7.28) 0.42
Damage to heart mentioned
 Internet-based news videos 0.59 (0.16–2.19) 0.43
 Professional videos 0.27 (0.03–2.33) 0.23
 Television news videos 1.20 (0.27–5.41) 0.81
Prevention: Preventive clothing mentioned
 Internet-based news videos 0.30 (0.03–2.83) 0.29
 Professional videos 0.60 (0.06–5.82) 0.66
 Television news videos 5.63 (1.23–25.76) 0.03
Prevention: Insecticides mentioned
 Internet-based news videos 1.32 (0.25–7.05) 0.74
 Professional videos 1.76 (0.27–11.69) 0.56
 Television news videos 7.71 (1.52–39.05) 0.01
Prevention: Removal of ticks mentioned
 Internet-based news videos 0.84 (0.22–3.28) 0.80
 Professional videos 1.31 (0.28–6.02) 0.73
 Television news videos 1.70 (0.36–8.05) 0.50
Prevention: Removal of habitat mentioned
 Internet-based news videosa
 Professional videosa
 Television news videosa
Prevention (not specific) mentioned
 Internet-based news videos 4.29 (1.19–15.39) 0.03
 Professional videosa
 Television news videos 0.75 (0.08–7.38) 0.81
Geography (where Lyme disease is most probable) mentioned
 Internet-based news videos 0.53 (0.15–1.92) 0.33
 Professional videos 0.49 (0.09–2.58) 0.40
 Television news videos 2.15 (0.56–8.23) 0.26
Ticks as vectors mentioned
 Internet-based news videos 0.87 (0.34–2.24) 0.78
 Professional videos 0.82 (0.26–2.61) 0.73
 Television news videos 0.96 (0.27–3.35) 0.94
Individual experience included
 Internet-based news videos 0.75 (0.28–1.96) 0.55
 Professional videos 1.62 (0.44–5.95) 0.47
 Television news videos 1.21 (0.32–4.65) 0.78
Products or services sold
 Internet-based news videos 3.65 (0.66–20.28) 0.14
 Professional videos 4.39 (0.66–29.22) 0.13
 Television news videosa
Lyme disease in animals mentioned
 Internet-based news videos 0.48 (0.09–2.68) 0.40
 Professional videos 1.00 (0.17–5.77) 1.00
 Television news videos 1.27 (0.22–7.50) 0.79
Natural cure mentioned
 Internet-based news videos 0.75 (0.17–3.41) 0.71
 Professional videos 2.33 (0.54–10.14) 0.26
 Television news videos 0.58 (0.06–5.51) 0.64

OR, odds ratio; CI, confidence interval.

a

If all videos belonged to a particular category of source of video, resulting in a zero cell count in the other category, then we could not calculate the OR or the standard error, and p-values would not be meaningful.