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Accepted for/Published in: Journal of Medical Internet Research

Date Submitted: Jun 28, 2024
Date Accepted: Nov 7, 2024

The final, peer-reviewed published version of this preprint can be found here:

Evaluating the Knowledge and Information-Seeking Behaviors of People Living With Multiple Sclerosis: Cross-Sectional Questionnaire Study

Duguay V, Comeau D, Turgeon T, Bouhamdani N, Belanger M, Weston L, Johnson T, Manzer N, Giberson M, Chamard-Witkowski L

Evaluating the Knowledge and Information-Seeking Behaviors of People Living With Multiple Sclerosis: Cross-Sectional Questionnaire Study

J Med Internet Res 2025;27:e63763

DOI: 10.2196/63763

PMID: 39998866

PMCID: 11897666

Cross-sectional Survey Evaluating the Knowledge and Information-Seeking Behaviours of People living with MS

  • VĂ©ronique Duguay; 
  • Dominique Comeau; 
  • Tiffany Turgeon; 
  • Nadia Bouhamdani; 
  • Mathieu Belanger; 
  • Lyle Weston; 
  • Tammy Johnson; 
  • Nicole Manzer; 
  • Melissa Giberson; 
  • Ludivine Chamard-Witkowski

ABSTRACT

Background:

The internet has emerged as a primary source of health-related information for patients with multiple sclerosis (MS); however, the abundance of misinformation found online may pose a significant threat to patients.

Objective:

This study explored the knowledge and information-seeking behavior of MS patients followed at a specialised MS clinic, focusing on their ability to discern MS-related scientific facts and misinformation about alternative therapies.

Methods:

This was achieved through a survey containing socio-demographic questions and 20 true or false statements, covering both scientific fact and popular misinformation about MS.

Results:

The mean age of the 69 participants was 48.4 years old, 78% were women, 81.2% were highly educated, 89.9% were receiving a disease-modifying therapy and 51.7% had experimented with alternative therapies. The mean score for answering the scientific and misinformation questions correctly was 69% and 22%, respectively. Notably, when questioned about misinformation, answering correctly dropped significantly, indecision increased as well as answering incorrectly. Socio-demographic and medical questions were not significantly associated to scientific and misinformation scores; however, misinformation scores did significantly correlate with levels of education (p=.04). The main sources of health-related information were from expert led MS websites (82%) and healthcare professionals (58.6%).

Conclusions:

Education at the clinic and consulting primarily moderate-high quality sources did not safeguard against misinformation, indicating a need for more misinformation-geared education at the clinic.


 Citation

Please cite as:

Duguay V, Comeau D, Turgeon T, Bouhamdani N, Belanger M, Weston L, Johnson T, Manzer N, Giberson M, Chamard-Witkowski L

Evaluating the Knowledge and Information-Seeking Behaviors of People Living With Multiple Sclerosis: Cross-Sectional Questionnaire Study

J Med Internet Res 2025;27:e63763

DOI: 10.2196/63763

PMID: 39998866

PMCID: 11897666

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