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When Medical News Comes from Press Releases—A Case Study of Pancreatic Cancer and Processed Meat

The media have a key role in communicating advances in medicine to the general public, yet the accuracy of medical journalism is an under-researched area. This project adapted an established monitoring instrument to analyse all identified news reports (n = 312) on a single medical research paper: a...

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Autores principales: Taylor, Joseph W., Long, Marie, Ashley, Elizabeth, Denning, Alex, Gout, Beatrice, Hansen, Kayleigh, Huws, Thomas, Jennings, Leifa, Quinn, Sinead, Sarkies, Patrick, Wojtowicz, Alex, Newton, Philip M.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2015
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4471125/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/26083640
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0127848
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author Taylor, Joseph W.
Long, Marie
Ashley, Elizabeth
Denning, Alex
Gout, Beatrice
Hansen, Kayleigh
Huws, Thomas
Jennings, Leifa
Quinn, Sinead
Sarkies, Patrick
Wojtowicz, Alex
Newton, Philip M.
author_facet Taylor, Joseph W.
Long, Marie
Ashley, Elizabeth
Denning, Alex
Gout, Beatrice
Hansen, Kayleigh
Huws, Thomas
Jennings, Leifa
Quinn, Sinead
Sarkies, Patrick
Wojtowicz, Alex
Newton, Philip M.
author_sort Taylor, Joseph W.
collection PubMed
description The media have a key role in communicating advances in medicine to the general public, yet the accuracy of medical journalism is an under-researched area. This project adapted an established monitoring instrument to analyse all identified news reports (n = 312) on a single medical research paper: a meta-analysis published in the British Journal of Cancer which showed a modest link between processed meat consumption and pancreatic cancer. Our most significant finding was that three sources (the journal press release, a story on the BBC News website and a story appearing on the ‘NHS Choices’ website) appeared to account for the content of over 85% of the news stories which covered the meta analysis, with many of them being verbatim or moderately edited copies and most not citing their source. The quality of these 3 primary sources varied from excellent (NHS Choices, 10 of 11 criteria addressed) to weak (journal press release, 5 of 11 criteria addressed), and this variance was reflected in the accuracy of stories derived from them. Some of the methods used in the original meta-analysis, and a proposed mechanistic explanation for the findings, were challenged in a subsequent commentary also published in the British Journal of Cancer, but this discourse was poorly reflected in the media coverage of the story.
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spelling pubmed-44711252015-06-29 When Medical News Comes from Press Releases—A Case Study of Pancreatic Cancer and Processed Meat Taylor, Joseph W. Long, Marie Ashley, Elizabeth Denning, Alex Gout, Beatrice Hansen, Kayleigh Huws, Thomas Jennings, Leifa Quinn, Sinead Sarkies, Patrick Wojtowicz, Alex Newton, Philip M. PLoS One Research Article The media have a key role in communicating advances in medicine to the general public, yet the accuracy of medical journalism is an under-researched area. This project adapted an established monitoring instrument to analyse all identified news reports (n = 312) on a single medical research paper: a meta-analysis published in the British Journal of Cancer which showed a modest link between processed meat consumption and pancreatic cancer. Our most significant finding was that three sources (the journal press release, a story on the BBC News website and a story appearing on the ‘NHS Choices’ website) appeared to account for the content of over 85% of the news stories which covered the meta analysis, with many of them being verbatim or moderately edited copies and most not citing their source. The quality of these 3 primary sources varied from excellent (NHS Choices, 10 of 11 criteria addressed) to weak (journal press release, 5 of 11 criteria addressed), and this variance was reflected in the accuracy of stories derived from them. Some of the methods used in the original meta-analysis, and a proposed mechanistic explanation for the findings, were challenged in a subsequent commentary also published in the British Journal of Cancer, but this discourse was poorly reflected in the media coverage of the story. Public Library of Science 2015-06-17 /pmc/articles/PMC4471125/ /pubmed/26083640 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0127848 Text en © 2015 Taylor et al http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are properly credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Taylor, Joseph W.
Long, Marie
Ashley, Elizabeth
Denning, Alex
Gout, Beatrice
Hansen, Kayleigh
Huws, Thomas
Jennings, Leifa
Quinn, Sinead
Sarkies, Patrick
Wojtowicz, Alex
Newton, Philip M.
When Medical News Comes from Press Releases—A Case Study of Pancreatic Cancer and Processed Meat
title When Medical News Comes from Press Releases—A Case Study of Pancreatic Cancer and Processed Meat
title_full When Medical News Comes from Press Releases—A Case Study of Pancreatic Cancer and Processed Meat
title_fullStr When Medical News Comes from Press Releases—A Case Study of Pancreatic Cancer and Processed Meat
title_full_unstemmed When Medical News Comes from Press Releases—A Case Study of Pancreatic Cancer and Processed Meat
title_short When Medical News Comes from Press Releases—A Case Study of Pancreatic Cancer and Processed Meat
title_sort when medical news comes from press releases—a case study of pancreatic cancer and processed meat
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4471125/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/26083640
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0127848
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