Find Reliable, Easy to Understand Medical Information

Find Reliable, Easy to Understand Medical Information

Contributed by Lawrence D. Weiss

Would you go to your doctor to find out why the brakes on your car are making so much noise? Would you go to your friendly neighborhood mechanic for diagnosis and treatment of a serious heart problem? I’ll just crawl out on a limb here and say, “probably not.” And that begs the question, “why not?”

Really. Why wouldn’t you see a doctor about your car problems? Because smart as your doctor is, he or she has little if any training or experience fixing cars. Same for the mechanic. Great with cars. Doesn’t know squat about heart problems. Seems like common sense.

Yet everyday millions of people cruise the internet looking for health care information and advice, and they find it. But who is on the other side of that website pushing those ideas? Is it health care providers and scientists with decades of training and experience? Or is it a guy who dropped out of school and decided to make a fast buck promoting wacky health ideas that would be right at home in the National Enquirer? Typically, we don’t know and can’t know.

Good news! This is a problem with a solution. There are websites on the internet supported by health care organizations with national and international reputations. At those sites you can be certain that the health information you get comes from trained and experienced health care professionals. True, they probably don’t know much about car repair, but they have spent much of their lives learning about medicine and providing health care.

For example, Mayo Clinic is the largest integrated not-for-profit medical group practice in the world. Mayo has more No. 1 rankings than any other hospital in the nation according to U.S. News & World Report. It is my first stop when I am looking for medical and health care info.

Grab your computer, open your browser, and go to http://www.mayoclinic.org. Click on the “Health Library” menu at the top. That’s where you start exploring “Diseases and Conditions,” “Symptoms,” “Drugs and Supplements,” “Healthy Lifestyle,” and more. Poke around to your heart’s content. They won’t try to sell you snake oil.

And here is a fantastic local resource right in Alaska: the Alaska Medical Library. Achy and scratchy eyeballs because you are spending too much time searching for stuff on the computer? How about talking with a real person at the Alaska Medical Library, located inside the UAA Consortium Library in Anchorage.

Wander around and scope out the Natural Medicines database, the Arctic Health database, and more. Call 1-888-997-7878 and talk to a real person to answer questions about available resources. After your eyeballs are rested, access the online resources hosted by the library at http://www.consortiumlibrary.org/aml. There is a simple one-time registration process, but then their world is yours.