Sun Ju Kim, Eal Whan Park, Eun Young Choi, Yoo-seock Cheong
Department of Family Medicine, Dankook University College of Medicine, Cheonan, Korea
Background: Online health information can influence
consumers to make informed decisions. There are
conflicting messages online about health concerns on the
use of e-cigarettes. We aimed to investigate differences in
those messages through Naver and Google¡¯s English
versions, which are the most representative portal sites in
Korea and in the world. Methods: We reviewed the top 100
web pages related to health effects of e-cigarettes on Naver
and Google in May 2018. Two medical doctors sorted the
web pages into three groups as positive, negative, and
mixed messages for e-cigarettes, as well as two groups
based on the relative safety of conventional smoking versus
e-cigarettes. Results: There were 10 and 27 positive, 65 and
45 negative, and 25 and 28 mixed messages on Naver and
Google, respectively. There were 15 messages on Naver and
53 on Google that considered e-cigarettes safer than
conventional cigarettes. The most frequent topics were
toxicity (71%) and diseases (22%) on Naver. Google
provides topics of health concerns for young people,
including gateway effect (47%), diseases (35%), and toxicity
(25%). Particularly, harm reduction which was not present
on Naver, came up on Google as 24%. Conclusions: We
found that Naver provides more negative messages on e-
cigarettes than does Google, which means that Koreans are
exposed more to negative information on e-cigarettes than
are foreign people who use Google. In future, more open
discussions about harm reduction should be conducted to
resolve the imbalance in information regarding health effects
of e-cigarettes in Korea. Korean J Health Promot
2019;19(1):25-31
Keywords: Electronic nicotine delivery
system, Harm reduction, Smoking cessation, Internet
|