|
Simple
Test Rates Accuracy
Of Cancer-Related Web Sites
Cancer
patients who are looking for herbs, vitamins, or other unconventional
therapies on the Internet have a new tool to help them avoid
quack cures and bad medical information.
Web users can rate a site with
four simple yes-or-no questions designed by the authors of "The
Internet for Medical Information About Cancer: Help or Hindrance?"
(Psychosomatics, 44:100-103, April 2003). Each "yes" answer
is considered a "red flag" -- a warning to users that the Web
site is likely to have vague or scientifically inaccurate information.
The questions are:
- Is online purchasing permitted?
- Are "patient testimonials" available?
- Is the treatment described as
a "cancer cure"?
- Is the treatment described as
"having no side effects"?
To test how well these questions
flagged questionable scientific information, lead author Scott
Matthews, MD, and colleagues from the University of California,
San Diego, Cancer Center searched the Internet for floressence,
amalaki, and the mineral selenium. These complementary or alternative
compounds are used by some cancer patients.
They reviewed 194 Web sites that
mentioned those three substances, some of which included outlandish
claims.
"For example, one site with two
red flags described how amalaki may be used to treat 'any liver
or heart complaints' and 'is also applied as a paste to the head
in mental disorders,'" wrote Matthews, et al.
Study authors checked each site's
information about the compounds with peer-reviewed, scientifically
accurate medical information. "Over 90% of the sites for floressence
and amalaki had at least one red flag," wrote the authors.
Misinformation Abundant
While sites with no red flags often
provided some scientifically accurate information, those with
red flags did not. Instead, they included large amounts of vague
and unsubstantiated information.
One site told of a 79-year-old
patient with "bowel cancer," who supposedly took "recommended
daily doses of Flor-Essence" for six months with "staggering results."
It went on to claim that normal appetite and bowel function returned,
pain was reduced, and there was a "disappearance of the tumors
without medical intervention."
Internet sites fared better when
describing the mineral selenium, which is being formally studied
for a possible role in preventing prostate cancer. Fewer than
25% of those sites had one or more red flags. And in general,
the scientific information about selenium was more accurate, no
matter how many red flags a site had.
The sites with accurate information
were also more likely to have links to respected scientific organizations
such as the National Cancer Institute and the National Center
for Complementary and Alternative Medicine.
The authors concluded that, "For
cancer treatments that have not been rigorously studied, the red
flag criteria offer a rapid way of screening Internet sites for
likely scientific accuracy." They went on to suggest that patients
avoid sites that raise any "red flags" in response to the four
screening questions.
"There is a staggering amount of
medical misinformation on the Internet," they wrote.
Reference
Source 102
For more information on how to prevent other diseases, use
PreventDisease.com's "Quick
Prevention Resources".
|