A4 Refereed article in a conference publication

Reliability of Health Information in the Media as Defined by Finnish Physicians




AuthorsAhlmén-Laiho U., Suominen S., Järvi U., Tuominen R.

EditorsLi H., Pálsdóttir Á., Trill R., Suomi R., Amelina Y.

Conference nameInternational Conference on Well-Being in the Information Society

PublisherSpringer Verlag

Publication year2018

JournalCommunications in Computer and Information Science

Book title Well-Being in the Information Society. Fighting Inequalities. WIS 2018

Journal name in sourceCommunications in Computer and Information Science

Series titleCommunications in Computer and Information Science

Volume907

First page 187

Last page199

ISBN978-3-319-97930-4

eISBN978-3-319-97931-1

ISSN1865-0929

DOIhttps://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-97931-1_15

Self-archived copy’s web addresshttps://research.utu.fi/converis/portal/detail/Publication/35868473


Abstract

Mass media is an important forum for the interaction between science and the general public, and media participation has been recognized by the Finnish Medical Association as a duty of physicians. Physicians are an important source of health information for journalists and their perceptions of reliability may influence which medias they are willing to collaborate with. In this study, Finnish physicians were asked to evaluate and define the characteristics of reliability for health information in the media. The survey was filled out by 266 physicians, who estimated that the most reliable mass media sources of health information are scientific publications, medical associations, universities, The Finnish National Institute for Health and Welfare, and other non-profit research centres. The lowest reliability scores were given to online discussion forums, entities representing complementary, and alternative medicine and individual patients. Female physicians and older physicians gave most health information sources higher scores than men or younger respondents. These results highlight a potential conflict between the need to translate scientific language to a form understandable to the general public, and a demand placed by physicians on journalism to be as scientifically accurate and precise as possible. In order to best convey their message to the general public, the professional skills of journalists should be utilised by physicians to overcome this issue.


Downloadable publication

This is an electronic reprint of the original article.
This reprint may differ from the original in pagination and typographic detail. Please cite the original version.





Last updated on 2024-26-11 at 15:32