Warning over untested 'miracle cures' online

Updated 10.20 Mon Nov 10 2008
Keywords: internet, cures, medical

Medical experts have warned patients should not place "false hope" in promises made by untested internet miracle cures.

Independent medical charity Sense About Science said many vulnerable patients are being duped by "surreptitious promotion and misleading stories" online and spending thousands of pounds on drugs that might be nothing more than snake oil.

The charity said it is worried about "the emotional and financial costs of over-hyped treatment claims that sell false hope".

Tracey Brown, managing director of Sense About Science, said: "We've been contacted by so many people exhausted from the pressure they feel to try advertised treatments, dietary regimes and exercises.

"One person told us how the last years of his wife's life were spent endlessly pursuing new treatments, from goats blood serums to unlicensed stem cell treatments abroad, all to no avail."

To assist, the charity has published a guide called I've Got Nothing to Lose by Trying It that explains how to tell the beneficial drugs from the bogus.

The campaign has also secured the political support of Liberal Democrat MP Phil Willis, who is chairman of the Innovation, Universities, Science and Skills Select Committee.

The politician said: "The cruellest deception for a patient with a chronic illness is the promise of a cure based on empty hope, not evidence.

"The publication of I've Got Nothing to Lose by Trying It is an inspired attempt to empower patients to evaluate so-called 'miracle cures' with evidence-based advice."

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