Bonakdar Robert Alan
Scripps Center for Integrative Medicine, La Jolla, Calif 92037, USA.
Fam Med. 2002 Jul-Aug;34(7):522-7.
A significant portion of the US population uses the Internet to obtain health information; nearly half of Internet users admit that this information influences decisions about their health care and medical treatments. Concurrently, approximately one third of the population uses herbal supplements; a higher percentage is noted for subgroups of cancer patients. The Dietary Supplement Health and Education Act (DSHEA) of 1994 contained regulatory standards for herbal supplements, including restricting any claims for disease prevention, treatment, or cure. This study determined the degree of compliance with the DSHEA, as applied to Internet sites focusing on the subject of herbal supplements and cancer.
Internet searches were conducted using six popular search engines and three master search engines in October-December 2000 using the linked terms herb and cancer. The Internet sites identified through this search process were examined for categories of information including claims regarding prevention, treatment, or cure; commercial nature; DSHEA and physician consultation warnings; country of origin; and use of research and testimonials. Additionally, commercial sites were reviewed to identify tactics used to promote products or services.
Each of the six primary search engines provided between 11,730 and 58,605 matches for herb and cancer. Further cross matching with the three master search engines identified 70 non-repeating sites that appeared on all three master search engines. Of these 70 sites, nine were irrelevant matches or no longer functioning. Of the remaining 61, 34 (54%) were commercial sites (CS) and 27 (42.8%) were noncommercial sites (NCS). Of the CS surveyed, prevention, treatment, and cure were discussed 92%, 89%, and 58%, respectively. CS provided testimonials, physician consultation recommendations, and DSHEA warnings 89%, 38.8%, and 36.1% of the time, respectively. CS provided research with references 30.6% of the time versus 92.6% of the time in NCS. All international commercial sites surveyed claimed herbal cancer cures.
Although the DSHEA was enacted and amended to decrease unlawful claims of disease prevention, treatment, and cure, the results of this study indicate that such claims are prevalent on commercial Internet sites. A majority of sites claim cancer cures through herbal supplementation with little regardfor current regulations, and such claims were more common on sites operated from outside the United States.
美国很大一部分人口通过互联网获取健康信息;近一半的互联网用户承认这些信息会影响他们关于医疗保健和治疗的决策。与此同时,约三分之一的人口使用草药补充剂;癌症患者亚组的这一比例更高。1994年的《膳食补充剂健康与教育法》(DSHEA)包含了草药补充剂的监管标准,包括限制任何有关疾病预防、治疗或治愈的声明。本研究确定了DSHEA在适用于专注于草药补充剂与癌症主题的互联网站点方面的遵守程度。
2000年10月至12月期间,使用六个流行搜索引擎和三个主搜索引擎,通过链接词“草药”和“癌症”进行互联网搜索。对通过该搜索过程识别出的互联网站点进行信息类别检查,包括有关预防、治疗或治愈的声明;商业性质;DSHEA和医生咨询警告;原产国;以及研究和推荐的使用情况。此外,对商业网站进行审查以确定用于推广产品或服务的策略。
六个主要搜索引擎中的每一个都为“草药”和“癌症”提供了11730至58605条匹配结果。与三个主搜索引擎的进一步交叉匹配识别出70个在所有三个主搜索引擎上都出现的非重复网站。在这70个网站中,9个是不相关的匹配项或已不再运行。在其余的61个网站中,34个(54%)是商业网站(CS),27个(42.8%)是非商业网站(NCS)。在接受调查的商业网站中,分别有92%、89%和58%讨论了预防、治疗和治愈。商业网站分别在89%、38.8%和36.1%的时间提供了推荐、医生咨询建议和DSHEA警告。商业网站在30.6%的时间提供了有参考文献的研究,而非商业网站这一比例为92.6%。所有接受调查的国际商业网站都声称草药可治愈癌症。
尽管制定并修订了DSHEA以减少有关疾病预防、治疗和治愈的非法声明,但本研究结果表明此类声明在商业互联网站点上很普遍。大多数网站声称通过草药补充可治愈癌症,几乎无视现行法规,而且此类声明在美国境外运营的网站上更为常见。