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Understanding the Social Mechanism of Cancer Misinformation Spread on YouTube and Lessons Learned: Infodemiological Study

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Abstract
BACKGROUND: A knowledge gap exists between the list of required actions and the action plan for countering cancer misinformation on social media. Little attention has been paid to a social media strategy for disseminating factual information while also disrupting misinformation on social media networks. OBJECTIVE: The aim of this study was to, first, identify the spread structure of cancer misinformation on YouTube. We asked the question, How do YouTube videos play an important role in spreading information about the self-administration of anthelmintics for dogs as a cancer medicine for humans?" Second, the study aimed to suggest an action strategy for disrupting misinformation diffusion on YouTube by exploiting the network logic of YouTube information flow and the recommendation system. We asked the question, "What would be a feasible and effective strategy to block cancer misinformation diffusion on YouTube?" METHODS: The study used the YouTube case of the self-administration of anthelmintics for dogs as an alternative cancer medicine in South Korea. We gathered Korean YouTube videos about the self-administration of fenbendazole. Using the YouTube application programming interface for the query "fenbendazole," 702 videos from 227 channels were compiled. Then, videos with at least 50,000 views, uploaded between September 2019 and September 2020, were selected from the collection, resulting in 90 videos. Finally, 10 recommended videos for each of the 90 videos were compiled, totaling 573 videos. Social network visualization for the recommended videos was used to identify three intervention strategies for disrupting the YouTube misinformation network. RESULTS: The study found evidence of complex contagion by human and machine recommendation systems. By exposing stakeholders to multiple information sources on fenbendazole self-administration and by linking them through a recommendation algorithm, YouTube has become the perfect infrastructure for reinforcing the belief that fenbendazole can cure cancer, despite government warnings about the risks and dangers of self-administration. CONCLUSIONS: Health authorities should upload pertinent information through multiple channels and should exploit the existing YouTube recommendation algorithm to disrupt the misinformation network. Considering the viewing habits of patients and caregivers, the direct use of YouTube hospital channels is more effective than the indirect use of YouTube news media channels or government channels that report public announcements and statements. Reinforcing through multiple channels is the key."
All Author(s)
H. Y. Yoon ; K. H. You ; J. H. Kwon ; J. S. Kim ; S. Y. Rha ; Y. J. Chang ; S. C. Lee
Issued Date
2022
Type
Article
Keyword
cancer misinformationsocial media health misinformationfenbendazoleself-administrationcomplex contagionYouTubesocial media factual information delivery strategy
Publisher
JMIR Publications
ISSN
1439-4456 ; 1438-8871
Citation Title
Journal of medical Internet research
Citation Volume
24
Citation Number
11
Citation Start Page
e39571
Citation End Page
e39571
Language(ISO)
eng
DOI
10.2196/39571
URI
http://schca-ir.schmc.ac.kr/handle/2022.oak/993
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종양혈액내과 > 1. Journal Papers
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