Editorial Commentary: Recognizing and Avoiding Medical Misinformation Across Digital Platforms: Smoke, Mirrors (and Streaming)

Arthroscopy. 2023 Dec;39(12):2454-2455. doi: 10.1016/j.arthro.2023.06.054.

Abstract

The evolution of social media and related online sources has substantially increased the ability of patients to query and access publicly available information that may have relevance to a potential musculoskeletal condition of interest. Although increased accessibility to information has several purported benefits, including encouragement of patients to become more invested in their care through self-teaching, a downside to the existence of a vast number of unregulated resources remains the risk of misinformation. As health care providers, we have a moral and ethical obligation to mitigate this risk by directing patients to high-quality resources for medical information and to be aware of resources that are unreliable. To this end, a growing body of evidence has suggested that YouTube lacks reliability and quality in terms of medical information concerning a variety of musculoskeletal conditions.

Publication types

  • Editorial
  • Comment

MeSH terms

  • Humans
  • Musculoskeletal Diseases*
  • Reproducibility of Results