2000
DOI: 10.1056/nejm200006013422206
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Coverage by the News Media of the Benefits and Risks of Medications

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Cited by 437 publications
(366 citation statements)
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“…Some of this is likely due the exaggeration of the benefits and risks of genetics research and health information (Loo et al 1998;Moynihan et al 2000;Ransohoff and Ransohoff 2001). Students are clearly getting significant quantities of information from the Internet (most student essays referenced stories from a variety of different websites, but not from scientific references); students often rely on their teachers for ultimate validation of their information through discussions and grading.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Some of this is likely due the exaggeration of the benefits and risks of genetics research and health information (Loo et al 1998;Moynihan et al 2000;Ransohoff and Ransohoff 2001). Students are clearly getting significant quantities of information from the Internet (most student essays referenced stories from a variety of different websites, but not from scientific references); students often rely on their teachers for ultimate validation of their information through discussions and grading.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Health researchers note that media campaigns can facilitate significant changes in health behaviour and health services utilization (Grilli et al 2004;Snyder et al 2004). Health researchers have also established that news coverage of therapeutic risks and benefits can be inaccurate or incomplete, raising concerns that media can encourage inappropriate changes in behaviour and services utilization (Moynihan et al 2000;Cassels et al 2003). Consequently, many health researchers suggest interventions to make news coverage less "sensational" and more "evidence-based," for example, by training journalists in the critical appraisal of research evidence (e.g., Oxman et al 1993;Larsson et al 2003;Moynihan 2003;Schwartz and Woloshin 2004).…”
Section: Résumémentioning
confidence: 99%
“…opinion leaders and leading researchers to increase the authority and veracity of their reports of health-related research and products, it is well established that academia itself increasingly forms ties with industry (Campbell & Zinner, 2010;Zinner, Bjankovic, Clarridge, Blumenthal, & Campbell, 2009) and the commercial ties of the researchers and research organisations upon whom journalists rely for their "expert" opinions are rarely established or made explicit (Moynihan et al, 2000). As a result, the public reading or viewing the news may have little knowledge of these relationships and their potential influence on the content of information being presented.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%