Efficacy of Quality Criteria to Identify Potentially Harmful Information: A Cross-sectional Survey of Complementary and Alternative Medicine Web Sites
- 29 June 2004
- journal article
- research article
- Published by JMIR Publications Inc. in Journal of Medical Internet Research
- Vol. 6 (2), e21
- https://doi.org/10.2196/jmir.6.2.e21
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Many users search the Internet for answers to health questions. Complementary and alternative medicine (CAM) is a particularly common search topic. Because many CAM therapies do not require a clinician's prescription, false or misleading CAM information may be more dangerous than information about traditional therapies. Many quality criteria have been suggested to filter out potentially harmful online health information. However, assessing the accuracy of CAM information is uniquely challenging since CAM is generally not supported by conventional literature. OBJECTIVE: The purpose of this study is to determine whether domain-independent technical quality criteria can identify potentially harmful online CAM content. METHODS: We analyzed 150 Web sites retrieved from a search for the three most popular herbs: ginseng, ginkgo and St. John's wort and their purported uses on the ten most commonly used search engines. The presence of technical quality criteria as well as potentially harmful statements (commissions) and vital information that should have been mentioned (omissions) was recorded. RESULTS: Thirty-eight sites (25%) contained statements that could lead to direct physical harm if acted upon. One hundred forty five sites (97%) had omitted information. We found no relationship between technical quality criteria and potentially harmful information. CONCLUSIONS: Current technical quality criteria do not identify potentially harmful CAM information online. Consumers should be warned to use other means of validation or to trust only known sites. Quality criteria that consider the uniqueness of CAM must be developed and validated. [J Med Internet Res 2004;6(2):e21]Keywords
This publication has 22 references indexed in Scilit:
- Inter-observer agreement for quality measures applied to online health information.2004
- Internet Marketing of Herbal ProductsJAMA, 2003
- Evaluating the quality of internet-based information about alternative therapies: development of the BIOME guidelines.Journal of Public Health, 2002
- eEurope 2002: Quality Criteria for Health related WebsitesJournal of Medical Internet Research, 2002
- Health Information on the InternetJAMA, 2002
- Empirical Studies Assessing the Quality of Health Information for Consumers on the World Wide WebJAMA, 2002
- 15.2: Invited Paper: LCos Testing Challenges: Defect Measurements in Display and Test SystemsSID Symposium Digest of Technical Papers, 2002
- Indicators of Accuracy of Consumer Health Information on the Internet: A Study of Indicators Relating to Information for Managing Fever in Children in the HomeJournal of the American Medical Informatics Association, 2002
- Assessing, controlling, and assuring the quality of medical information on the Internet: Caveant lector et viewor--Let the reader and viewer bewareJAMA, 1997
- Bias, prevalence and kappaJournal of Clinical Epidemiology, 1993