CONTEXT
Passage of the Dietary Supplement Health and Education Act in 1994 restricted the Food and Drug Administration's control over dietary supplements, leading to enormous growth in their promotion. The Internet is often used by consumers as a source of information on such therapies.
OBJECTIVE
To assess the information presented and indications claimed on the Internet for the 8 best-selling herbal products.
DATA SOURCES
We searched the Internet using the 5 most commonly used search engines. For each, we entered the names of the 8 most widely used herbal supplements (ginkgo biloba, St John's wort, echinacea, ginseng, garlic, saw palmetto, kava kava, and valerian root). We analyzed the health content of all Web sites listed on the first page of the search results.
STUDY SELECTION
We analyzed all accessible, English-language Web sites that pertained to oral herbal supplements. A total of 522 Web sites were identified; of these, 443 sites met inclusion criteria for the analysis.
DATA EXTRACTION
The nature of the Web site (retail or nonretail), whether it was a sponsored link, and all references, indications, claims, and disclaimers were recorded. Two reviewers independently categorized medical claims as disease or nondisease according to Food and Drug Administration criteria.
DATA SYNTHESIS
Among 443 Web sites, 338 (76%) were retail sites either selling product or directly linked to a vendor. A total of 273 (81%) of the 338 retail Web sites made 1 or more health claims; of these, 149 (55%) claimed to treat, prevent, diagnose, or cure specific diseases. More than half (153/292; 52%) of sites with a health claim omitted the standard federal disclaimer. Nonretail sites were more likely than retail sites to include literature references, although only 52 (12%) of the 443 Web sites provided referenced information without a link to a distributor or vendor.
CONCLUSIONS
Consumers may be misled by vendors' claims that herbal products can treat, prevent, diagnose, or cure specific diseases, despite regulations prohibiting such statements. Physicians should be aware of this widespread and easily accessible information. More effective regulation is required to put this class of therapeutics on the same evidence-based footing as other medicinal products.
[1]
D. Rennie,et al.
The need for regulation of dietary supplements--lessons from ephedra.
,
2003,
JAMA.
[2]
J. Drazen.
Inappropriate advertising of dietary supplements.
,
2003,
The New England journal of medicine.
[3]
A. Woolf,et al.
For Personal Use. Only Reproduce with Permission from the Lancet Publishing Group
,
2022
.
[4]
A. Grollman,et al.
Botanical medicines--the need for new regulations.
,
2002,
The New England journal of medicine.
[5]
Characteristics of health-related web sites identified by common internet portals.
,
2002
.
[6]
R. Bonakdar.
Herbal cancer cures on the Web: noncompliance with The Dietary Supplement Health and Education Act.
,
2002,
Family medicine.
[7]
Petra Wilson,et al.
How to find the good and avoid the bad or ugly: a short guide to tools for rating quality of health information on the internet.
,
2002,
BMJ : British Medical Journal.
[8]
A. Mitchell,et al.
Recent patterns of medication use in the ambulatory adult population of the United States: the Slone survey.
,
2002,
JAMA.
[9]
C. DesRoches,et al.
Americans' views on the use and regulation of dietary supplements.
,
2001,
Archives of internal medicine.
[10]
B. Gaster,et al.
St John's wort for depression: a systematic review.
,
2000,
Archives of internal medicine.
[11]
T. Wilt,et al.
Saw palmetto extracts for treatment of benign prostatic hyperplasia: a systematic review.
,
1998,
JAMA.
[12]
R. Kessler,et al.
Trends in alternative medicine use in the United States, 1990-1997: results of a follow-up national survey.
,
1998,
JAMA.
[13]
F. Meyer,et al.
Validity of advertising claims for multivitamin preparation Vitacor 20/90 on the internet
,
1998,
BMJ.
[14]
M. Hazzard.
Klaus Linde, Gilbert Ramirez, Cynthia D. Mulrow, Andrej Pauls, Wolfgang Weidenhammer, and Dieter Melchart. (1996). St. John's wort for depression—An overview and meta-analysis of randomized clinical trials. British Medical Journal, 313, 3 August 1996, 253-8
,
1997
.