Digital Health (Jul 2023)
Development and validation of a quality assessment tool to assess online nutrition information
Abstract
Setting The internet is an important source of health information but is unregulated. Little research has focused on the assessment of digital information related to nutrition. Aim To develop and validate a novel online quality assessment tool (OQAT) for quality assessment of online nutrition information. Method The OQAT was developed and validated in six distinct stages. After reviewing the literature, a framework and criteria were developed and formalised. Next, the quality assessment criteria were piloted on a subset of data and criteria refined. The established criteria were then validated against a previously validated assessment tool, and reliability was tested. Finally, the validated OQAT was used to assess the quality of articles from a 24-h collection period, 19 April 2021. Results The final OQAT consisted of 10 key questions. Twenty-six news articles were assessed independently by two raters. Comparison of scores found moderate internal consistency ( α = 0.382). Cohen's Kappa coefficient demonstrated high interrater agreement ( k = 0.653, p < 0.001). The OQAT was tested on 291 relevant Uniform Resource Locators (URLs), which were determined to be either poor 3% ( n = 9), satisfactory 49% ( n = 144), or high-quality 48% ( n = 139) articles. There was a statistically significant difference in OQAT scores between blogs, news articles, and press releases, χ 2 (2) = 23.22, p < 0.001, with a mean rank OQAT score of 138.2 for blogs, 216.6 for news articles, and 188.7 for press releases. Conclusion This novel tool provides a reliable and objective method for assessing the quality of nutrition content online. It could potentially be used by researchers to assess the quality of online information in different settings and by organisations to inform readers of the quality of information being accessed.