Advice for Health Care Professionals and Users: An Evaluation of Websites for Perinatal Anxiety

Moore, Donna and Harrison, Virginia (2018). Advice for Health Care Professionals and Users: An Evaluation of Websites for Perinatal Anxiety. JMIR Mental Health, 5(4), article no. e11464.

DOI: https://doi.org/10.2196/11464

Abstract

Background: Many websites are available with information and resources for perinatal anxiety; however, there is limited research on the quality and content of these sites.
Objective: This study aims to identify what sites are available on perinatal anxiety, identify any information and therapeutic advice given, and review its accuracy and website design.
Methods: We conducted an evaluation of websites for perinatal anxiety. Eligible websites (N=50) were evaluated for accuracy of information, resources for mothers, website quality, and readability.
Results: Information was often incomplete and focused on symptoms rather than risk factors or impact of untreated perinatal anxiety. Websites often had information on treatment (46/50, 92%), but much less on screening (19/50, 38%). Most sites provided at least some resources to support mothers (49/50, 98%), but active, guided support was infrequent (25/50, 50%). Website quality was extremely variable and mostly difficult to read (42/50, 84%).
Conclusions: This study recommends the top 4 websites on perinatal anxiety for health care professionals and users. There is a need for websites to be developed that provide accurate, evidence-based information that women can relate to with quality support resources. Furthermore, these sites should be easy to use and readable.

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