• J Gen Intern Med · Dec 2006

    Brief report: development of a prescription medication information webliography for consumers.

    • Yu Ko, Mary Brown, Rowan Frost, and Raymond L Woosley.
    • Center for Education and Research on Therapeutics, University of Arizona, Tucson, AZ, USA.
    • J Gen Intern Med. 2006 Dec 1; 21 (12): 131313161313-6.

    BackgroundWebsites offering drug information vary in coverage and quality, and most health care consumers are poorly equipped to assess the quality of internet medication information.ObjectiveTo establish a webliography of recommended prescription medication information websites for health care consumers and providers.Design And MethodsDrug information websites were systematically identified based on recommendations from health professionals and text-word searches of MEDLINE and Google. The resulting sample of websites was evaluated in a 2-step process. Candidate websites were first screened using inclusion/exclusion criteria representing minimum information requirements. Websites that passed the inclusion/exclusion criteria were then rated on 16 quality criteria using a 5-point scale by 3 trained judges. Website ratings were averaged, then multiplied by the corresponding importance weight of each criterion and summed to generate a total score. Websites with the highest total scores were included in the webliography.ResultsTen websites were selected for inclusion in the webliography. The 3 highest-scoring websites were Anthem Blue Cross and Blue Shield (http://home.anthemhealth.com/topic/drugcenter), U.S. National Library of Medicine (https://www.nlm.nih.gov/medlineplus/druginformation.html), and Healthvision (http://www.yourhealthinformation.com/library/healthguide/en-us/drugguide/default.htm).ConclusionMedication information websites vary widely in quality and content. The online webliography is a valuable and easily accessed tool that can be recommended by health care professionals to patients who request referral to reliable websites.

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