Parents of children with cancer distrust and fear online sources of health information, study shows
In the age of information, physicians still are the most trusted source when parents confront serious illness
2012-03-22
(Press-News.org) BUFFALO, N.Y. -- Parents and adult caregivers of pediatric cancer patients prefer personal consultations with trusted health care providers over online sources for information about their child's illness, according to a University at Buffalo research study.
Despite the accessibility of online medical information, the UB study found that parents not only distrusted information found through the Internet, they often feared what types of information they might encounter.
"Respondents were telling us they were uncertain of the information online and that they were afraid of the unknown," says study co-author Elizabeth Gage, PhD, professor of community health and health behavior in the UB School of Public Health and Health Professions. "They didn't want to run into stories about 'the worst case scenario.'"
Gage, along with Christina Panagakis, a graduate student in sociology at UB, and colleagues at Roswell Park Cancer Institute, interviewed 41 parents of pediatric cancer patients in the U.S. to learn how caregivers use the Internet as an information source about their child's illness, its prognosis and potential treatment options.
The study, "The Devil You Know: Parental Online Information Seeking after a Pediatric Cancer Diagnosis," will appear in the May issue of Sociology of Health and Illness.
Beyond a distrust and fear of health-related Internet sites, the study's findings also suggest that online searching for information about an illness might vary between patients dealing with routine conditions and those faced with life-threatening problems.
"The likelihood of a patient going online might depend very much on context," Gage explains.
Previous studies looked at what Gage described as routine, contested or stigmatized illnesses, while her research contributes a piece of knowledge relative to severe pediatric illnesses.
"One of the reasons we were interested in exploring this issue is that so much research and media coverage had examined how the Internet was breaking down barriers between patients and caregivers and their physicians. But that wasn't that case in our study," Gage says. "Perhaps because of the severity of the diagnosis, parents and caregivers preferred to receive their information from sources other than the Internet."
The information-seeking behavior of parents and other caregivers appears to be influenced by the volume of available information, Gage says. Patients with routine illnesses might find minor details online that better inform their conversations with health care providers, but respondents in this study who were confronting a more serious diagnosis were overwhelmed by the often conflicting sources of online material.
"Families in our study did not know where to begin or how to sift through such a huge mound of information," Gage said.
Those who did look for information through the Internet tended to limit their searches to what they considered more credible sources, such as medical journals and hospital libraries, the study found.
"A lot of families used the Internet to establish connections with other families in a similar situation, as much for emotional support as for reasons to share medical information," Gage says. "However, many families ascribed a certain expert status upon these individuals, almost elevating the experience of what they call 'the veterans' to the same level as that of a trusted hospital-based site."
###
Gage's photo and bio are available here: http://bit.ly/FPLli1
ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:
False killer whales use acoustic squint to target prey
2012-03-22
Hunting in the ocean's murky depths, vision is of little use, so toothed whales and dolphins (odontocetes) rely on echolocation to locate tasty morsels with incredible precision. Laura Kloepper from the University of Hawaii, USA, explains that odontocetes produce their distinctive echolocation clicks in nasal structures in the forehead and broadcast them through a fat-filled acoustic lens, called the melon. 'Studies by other people showed odontocetes have the ability to control the shape of the echolocation beam and it has always been assumed that they are using the melon ...
Getting in rhythm helps children grasp fractions, study finds
2012-03-22
Tapping out a beat may help children learn difficult fraction concepts, according to new findings due to be published in the journal Educational Studies in Mathematics. An innovative curriculum uses rhythm to teach fractions at a California school where students in a music-based program scored significantly higher on math tests than their peers who received regular instruction.
"Academic Music" is a hands-on curriculum that uses music notation, clapping, drumming and chanting to introduce third-grade students to fractions. The program, co-designed by San Francisco State ...
Prenatal exposure to combustion-related pollutants and anxiety, attention problems in young children
2012-03-22
NEW YORK ( March 22, 2012) - Mothers' exposure during pregnancy to a class of air pollutants called
polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (PAH) can lead to behavioral problems in their children. PAH are
released to air during incomplete combustion of fossil fuel such as diesel, gasoline, coal, and other
organic material.
The study is the first report of associations between child attentional and behavioral problems among school‐age children and two complementary measures of prenatal PAH exposure: monitored air concentrations of PAH and a PAH-specific biomarker of exposure ...
Nearly all states have taken action on Affordable Care Act's Patients' Bill of Rights
2012-03-22
March 22, 2012, New York, NY—As the second anniversary of the Affordable Care Act approaches, a new Commonwealth Fund report finds that 49 states and the District of Columbia have already taken action supporting the law's implementation, such as passing legislation, issuing regulations or other guidance, or actively reviewing insurer filings. Early insurance market reforms in the law include new rules for insurers such as bans on lifetime limits on benefits and dependent coverage for young adults up to age 26.
The report, Implementing the Affordable Care Act: State Action ...
Majority of fourth graders are exposed to smoke, study finds
2012-03-22
AUGUSTA, Ga. – More than 75 percent of fourth-graders in urban and rural settings have measurable levels of a nicotine breakdown product in their saliva that documents their second-hand smoke exposure, researchers report.
A study of 428 fourth graders and 453 parents in seven rural and seven urban Georgia schools also showed that the urban children were more likely to be smokers – 14.9 percent versus 6.6 percent. Additionally urban children have the most exposure to smokers: 79.6 percent versus 75.3 percent, according to findings presented to the 15th World Conference ...
Optex Announces PoE IP Encoder to Ease Integration of Optex Sensors with VMS and NVRs
2012-03-22
The new PIE-1 Alarm IP Encoder from Optex provides the dual functions of PoE power delivery to remote Optex devices and conversion of alarm signals to an IP protocol for delivery to video management systems or network video recorders. The PIE-1 provides support for Optex sensors in security systems using VMS and NVRs through vendor- unique API.
The device can be used in a number of ways:
- PoE (Power over Ethernet) only: to power remotely the Optex Redscan laser scanner provides IP alarm signals natively and requires no conversion encoding. The PIE-1 supports both ...
French Media Spotlight American Writer's Quest to Overhaul French Grammar
2012-03-22
"Erik Orsenna, dictator of grammar! Look, you're killing the French language!" the rapidly-becoming viral video went (OK, viral by French not American standards).
Then the number 2 magazine group of France called "Le Nouvel Obs" picked up the story as did many literary websites (see attachments on right-hand side of this text.)
Some of these press releases start with those very same angry words, the aggressive words pronounced by the author on the video against French grammar.
The problem is that the author on the video is in fact an American ...
Fox Chase Cancer Center leads efforts to establish national standards for survivorship care
2012-03-20
HOLLYWOOD, Fla. (March 18, 2012)—People are living longer with and after a cancer diagnosis, making survivorship clinics and programs—as well as official guidelines and practices governing the care of survivors—an important emerging component of modern cancer care. Many institutions are looking to gather these resources into an easily understandable plan for their survivors.
"Cancer survivors face a lot of unique and very specific challenges," says Crystal S. Denlinger, M.D., a medical oncologist at Fox Chase Cancer Center who will present on best practices in cancer ...
Tracking proteins behaving badly provides insights for treatments of brain diseases
2012-03-20
A research team led by the University of Melbourne, Australia, has developed a novel technique that tracks diseased proteins behaving badly by forming clusters in brain diseases such as Huntington's and Alzheimer's.
The technique published in Nature Methods today is the first of its kind to rapidly identify and track the location of diseased proteins inside cells and could provide insights into improved treatments for brain diseases and others such as cancer.
Developed by Dr Danny Hatters and his team of the Department of Biochemistry and Molecular Biology at the ...
The effect of rosuvastatin on incident pneumonia: Results from the JUPITER trial
2012-03-20
Statins may prevent pneumonia, according to a new study in CMAJ (Canadian Medical Association Journal). Researchers from Israel and the United States analyzed data from the JUPITER trial, a randomized, double-blind trial with placebo control groups conducted at 1315 sites in 26 countries to look at the use of the statin rosuvastatin in disease prevention. The trial involved 17 802 men aged 50 years or older and women aged 60 years or older without a history of heart disease or diabetes.
Patients were randomized to receive either a placebo or rosuvastatin, a statin used ...
LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:
Childhood poverty and/or parental mental illness may double teens’ risk of violence and police contact
Fizzy water might aid weight loss by boosting glucose uptake and metabolism
Muscular strength and good physical fitness linked to lower risk of death in people with cancer
Recommendations for studying the impact of AI on young people's mental health proposed by Oxford researchers
Trump clusters: How an English lit graduate used AI to make sense of Twitter bios
Empty headed? Largest study of its kind proves ‘bird brain’ is a misnomer
Wild baboons not capable of visual self-awareness when viewing their own reflection
$14 million supports work to diversify human genome research
New study uncovers key mechanism behind learning and memory
Seeing the unseen: New method reveals ’hyperaccessible’ window in freshly replicated DNA
Extreme climate pushed thousands of lakes in West Greenland ‘across a tipping point,’ study finds
Illuminating an asymmetric gap in a topological antiferromagnet
Global public health collaboration benefits Americans, SHEA urges continued support of the World Health Organization
Astronomers thought they understood fast radio bursts. A recent one calls that into question.
AAAS announces addition of Journal of EMDR Practice and Research to Science Partner Journal program
Study of deadly dog cancer reveals new clues for improved treatment
Skin-penetrating nematodes have a love-hate relationship with carbon dioxide
Fewer than 1% of U.S. clinical drug trials enroll pregnant participants, study finds
A global majority trusts scientists, wants them to have greater role in policymaking, study finds
Transforming China’s food system: Healthy diets lead the way
Time to boost cancer vaccine work, declare UK researchers
Colorado State receives $326M from DOE/EPA to improve oil and gas operations and reduce methane emissions
Research assesses how infertility treatments can affect family and work relationships
New findings shed light on cell health: Key insights into the recycling process inside cells
Human papillomavirus infection kinetics revealed in new longitudinal study
Antibiotics modulate E. coli’s resistance to phages
Building sentence structure may be language-specific
Biotin may shield brain from manganese-induced damage, study finds
Treatment for children with obesity has lasting effect
Spotted hyena found in Egypt for the first time in 5,000 years
[Press-News.org] Parents of children with cancer distrust and fear online sources of health information, study showsIn the age of information, physicians still are the most trusted source when parents confront serious illness