International Brazilian Journal of Urology (Jul 2021)

Comparing public interest on stone disease between developed and underdeveloped nations: are search patterns on google trends similar?

  • Giovanni S. Marchini,
  • Kauy V. M. Faria,
  • Felippe L. Neto,
  • Fábio César Miranda Torricelli,
  • Alexandre Danilovic,
  • Fábio Carvalho Vicentini,
  • Carlos A. Batagello,
  • Miguel Srougi,
  • Willaim C. Nahas,
  • Eduardo Mazzucchi

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1590/s1677-5538.ibju.2020.1076
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 47, no. 5
pp. 989 – 996

Abstract

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ABSTRACT Objective: The big data provided by Google Trends may reveal patterns in health information-seeking behavior on population from Brazil and United States (US). Our objective was to explore and compare patterns of stone disease online information-seeking behaviors in both nations. Materials and Methods: To compare Relative Search Volume (RSV) among different urologic key words we chose “US” and “Brazil” as country and “01/01/2009 - 31/12/2018” as time-range. The final selection included 12 key words in each language. We defined “ureteroscopy” as a reference and compared RSV against it for each term. RSV was adjusted by the reference and normalized in a scale from 0-100. Trend presence was evaluated by Mann Kendall Test and magnitude by Sen's Slope (SS) Estimator. Results: We found an upward trend (p <0.01) in most of the researched terms in both countries. Higher temporal trends were seen for “Kidney Stone” (SS=0.36), “Kidney Pain” (SS=0.39) and “Tamsulosin” (SS=0.21) in the US. Technical treatment terms had little search volumes and no increasing trend. “Kidney Stent” and “Double J” had a significant increase in search trend over time and had a relevant search volume overall in 2018. In Brazil, “Calculo Renal”, “Colica Renal”, “Dor no Rim” and “Pedra no Rim” had a significant increase in RSV (p <0.001). More common and popular terms as “Kidney Stent” and “Tamsulosin” were highly correlated with “Kidney Pain” and “Kidney Stone” in both countries. Conclusions: In the last decade, there was a significant increase in online search for medical information related to stone-disease. Population from both countries tend to look more for generic terms related to symptoms, the disease, medical management and kidney stent, than for technical treatment vocabulary.

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