๐”– Bobbio Scriptorium
โœฆ   LIBER   โœฆ

Evaluation of cancer information on the Internet

โœ Scribed by J. Sybil Biermann; Gregory J. Golladay; Mary Lou V. H. Greenfield; Laurence H. Baker


Publisher
John Wiley and Sons
Year
1999
Tongue
English
Weight
109 KB
Volume
86
Category
Article
ISSN
0008-543X

No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.

โœฆ Synopsis


T he Internet is a massively expanding body of information, with an estimated 320 million Web pages available. 1 In 1997 an estimated 24 million North Americans used the Internet, 2 and Internet use has been estimated to double each year. 3 Even prior to the advent of the Internet as a source of medical information, patients have become more informed regarding their care, 4 seeking increased amounts of information regarding their diagnoses and primarily wanting more information regarding their treatment options. In the past, these patients would rely heavily on health professionals for this information, through conversations or from pamphlets, videos, or books available to physicians for office distribution. Some resourceful patients may have ventured into medical libraries and some may have navigated through Index Medicus. Even the accessibility of MEDLINE searches in libraries and public institutions provided patients chiefly with peer-reviewed medical articles.

We are living in a time of exponential expansion in accessibility to medical information. Data that previously would have required hours of research in a medical library now can be found easily by anyone with access to the Internet. This has enhanced the medical professional's ability to gain extensive knowledge of research findings from many different medical specialties. However, medical professionals are not the only ones searching the Internet for such information. Our patients have the same capability that we have to research a medical topic thoroughly via the Internet. However, of concern is the quality of this newly gained knowledge. The free flow of information on the Internet permits anyone with good computer skills and a modem to establish a Web site with whatever information they wish to share. In this respect, the Internet becomes the great equalizer: experts, specialists, authorities, professionals, alternative therapy promoters, interested lay people, charlatans, and hucksters all may set up sites containing information regarding specific topics of interest.

As physicians, we are concerned whether medical information


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