• Pediatric emergency care · Dec 2013

    Investigating the Reliability of Substance Toxicity Information Found on the Internet in Pediatric Poisonings.

    • Thomas E Kearney, Diane Lieu, Nathan Singer, Ben Tsutaoka, Raymond Ho, and Kent Olson.
    • From the *California Poison Control System, San Francisco Division; †Department of Clinical Pharmacy, University of California, San Francisco; ‡Natividad Medical Center, Salinas; §Kaiser Permanente, Downey Medical Center, Downey; and ∥Department of Medicine, University of California, San Francisco, CA.
    • Pediatr Emerg Care. 2013 Dec 1;29(12):1249-54.

    ObjectivesThe Internet may be the first source of information used by parents during a suspected poisoning of their children. Our primary aim was to assess the reliability of the Internet as a resource for information for parents to initially manage a suspected poisoning involving their child without outside consultation.MethodsWe distributed a self-administered survey to English-speaking parents to evaluate their Internet access behaviors so we could emulate their search strategies for a poisoning. A panel of clinical toxicologists performed an evaluation of Websites to determine the proportion that provided accurate and adequate information on common substances involved in poisonings.ResultsOf 21 parents surveyed, 15 (71%) used the Internet daily, with Google and Yahoo being the most commonly used search engines. Seven parents (39%) were somewhat to very likely to utilize the Internet during a poisoning scenario with prescription medications involving their child. Overall, only 27 (38%) of the Websites reviewed advised the user to call the poison center with the proper 800 telephone number, whereas no Website provided adequate information to manage the poisoning without outside consultation. Few Websites provided information on the toxic dose (13%), how to determine whether to manage the poisoning at home or in a hospital (22%), or first aid (28%).ConclusionsThe information provided on the Internet for substances involved in poisonings is variable and often incomplete. Reliance on the Internet for poisonings could create needless delays and inappropriate assessments and actions to manage a pediatric poisoning incident.

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