| Literature DB >> 31446410 |
Mary O'Keeffe1, Alexandra Barratt2, Christopher Maher3, Joshua Zadro3, Alice Fabbri4, Mark Jones5, Ray Moynihan2,5.
Abstract
INTRODUCTION: Much testing in medicine is aimed at healthy people to facilitate the early detection of health conditions. However, there is growing evidence that early detection is a double-edged sword that may cause harm in the form of overdiagnosis. The media can be seen as a major generator of consumer demand for health services. Previous research shows that media coverage tends to overstate the benefits and downplay the harms of medical interventions for the sick, and often fails to cover relevant conflicts of interest of those promoting those interventions. However, little is known about how the benefits and harms of testing the healthy are covered by media. This study will examine the media coverage of the benefits and harms of testing the healthy, and coverage of potential conflicts of interest of those promoting the testing. METHODS AND ANALYSIS: We will examine five tests: 3D mammography for the early detection of breast cancer; blood liquid biopsy for the early detection of cancer; blood biomarker tests for the early detection of dementia; artificial intelligence technology for the early detection of dementia; and the Apple Watch Series 4 electrocardiogram sensor for the early detection of atrial fibrillation. We will identify media coverage using Google News and the LexisNexis and ProQuest electronic databases. Sets of two independent reviewers will conduct story screening and coding. We will include English language media stories referring to any of the five tests from January 2016 to May 2019. We will include media stories if they refer to any benefits or harms of the test for our conditions of interest. Data will be analysed using categorical data analysis and multinomial logistic regression. ETHICS AND DISSEMINATION: No ethical approval is required for this study. Results will be presented at relevant scientific conferences and in peer-reviewed literature. © Author(s) (or their employer(s)) 2019. Re-use permitted under CC BY-NC. No commercial re-use. See rights and permissions. Published by BMJ.Entities:
Keywords: benefits; harms; media coverage; overdiagnosis; testing the healthy
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31446410 PMCID: PMC6721653 DOI: 10.1136/bmjopen-2019-029532
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMJ Open ISSN: 2044-6055 Impact factor: 2.692
Draft coding tool
| Media story description | ||
| Name of media source | eg, New York Times | |
| Country of media source | ||
| Word count | ||
| Release date | ||
| Author name | ||
| Type of media | eg, 1=newspaper, 2=magazine, 3=radio, 4=TV, 4-blog/opinion piece, 4-wire news, 5=unclear/not stated | |
| Test mentioned | In the headline | 1=Yes, 0=No |
| In the body | 1=Yes, 0=No | |
| Mention of the health condition that the test is used for? | Yes/No | 1=Yes (record condition) |
| Context about the screening test (benefits and harms) | ||
| How benefit was described | ||
| Any benefit mentioned or implied? | Yes/No | 1=Yes, 0=No |
| Any benefit quantified? | Yes/No | 1=Yes (record how quantified) |
| Was anecdote or other real-life example of benefit given? | Yes/No | 1=Yes, 0=No |
| Anecdote | 1=Yes, 0=No | |
| Celebrity | 1=Yes, 0=No | |
| Benefits referred to as revolutionary, life-saving, breakthrough, leading to improved treatment | ||
| How harm was described | ||
| Any harm mentioned or implied? | 1=Yes, 0=No | |
| Any harm quantified? | 1=Yes (record how quantified) | |
| Was anecdote or other real-life example of harm given? | Yes/No | 1=Yes, 0=No |
| Anecdote | 1=Yes, 0=No | |
| Celebrity | 1=Yes, 0=No | |
| Any specific harms of screening mentioned? (eg, overdiagnosis, potential overtreatment) | 1=Yes (record specific harm) | |
| Evidence of conflicts of interest | ||
| Any specific scientific study quoted or mentioned about the screening test? | Yes/No | 1=Yes, 0=No |
| Does the scientific study disclose any financial ties of the authors to the manufacturers of the screening test discussed in story? | 1=Yes, 0=No | |
| Did the media story include information about financial ties of the authors to the manufacturer of the screening test? (if relevant) | 1=Yes, 0=No | |
| Does the scientific study mention receipt of study funding from the manufacturers of the screening test discussed in story? | 1=Yes, 0=No | |
| Did the media story include information about receipt of study funding from the manufacturers of the relevant screening test? (if relevant) | 1=Yes, 0=No | |
| Other sources quoted or mentioned about the screening test | Yes/No | 1=Yes, 0=No |
| Physician/provider? | 1=Yes, 0=No | |
| Patient quoted? | 1=Yes, 0=No | |
| Other source? | 1=Yes, 0=No | |
| Overall impressions/tone | ||
| Media story leaves you with sense that the screening test is | 1=Beneficial overall | |
| Overall tone about going for the screening test | 1=Overall positive (worth getting) | |
| Paste in anything else unusual, interesting or any especially juicy quotes (including source) (eg, screening tests being lifesaving, a breakthrough, revolutionary) | Leave a comment or paste here anything interesting (even quotes) | |
This is a draft coding tool. The tool may be modified once the reviewers pilot test it with a sample of included media stories.