Content and Quality of Information about Stroke in Wikipedia across Multiple Languages

Eur Neurol. 2022;85(4):308-312. doi: 10.1159/000521938. Epub 2022 Feb 8.

Abstract

Background: Given the high contribution of stroke to the global burden of disease, there is a need for good-quality information on Web platforms such as Wikipedia.

Aims: This study aimed to describe the quality of the Wikipedia articles on stroke written in different languages.

Methods: We studied the world's 30 most spoken languages. With the DISCERN score, we evaluated the quality of the information within the Wikipedia articles. Three investigators assessed each of the texts translated to English. We also registered the word count, the number of references, and if the text referred to the emergency status of stroke, cues to suspect a stroke, and allusions to endovascular treatment.

Results: There is a Wikipedia article for stroke in 23 out of the 30 languages. The mean DISCERN score was 35 29.9 ± 9.2. Overall quality ranged from 3/5 in 26.1% to 1/5 in 17.4%. Word count had a mean of 36 3,145.8 ± 3,048.9 words, and the texts included a mean of 43.1 ± 57.3 references; 69.6% of the articles referred to stroke as a medical emergency, 52.2% included awareness symptoms, and 34.8% included endovascular management among the stroke treatments. Three pages included steroids as part of the stroke treatment. The DISCERN score was not correlated with the number of speakers, but it was positively correlated with the number of references (r = 0.90, p < 0.001) and the number of words (r = 0.78, p < 0.001) in the articles.

Conclusion: The analyzed Wikipedia articles do not contain relevant and up-to-date information to the general population. Further, the content varies widely across the different languages and is missing for some of them. The missing versions disproportionally affect millions of potential information seekers in undeveloped countries.

Keywords: DISCERN instrument; Information quality; Stroke.

Publication types

  • News

MeSH terms

  • Humans
  • Language*
  • Stroke* / therapy