BKHFHIOI.RVW 980731 "How to Find Health Information on the Internet", Bruce Maxwell, 1998, 1-56802-271-9, U$35.95 %A Bruce Maxwell bmaxwell@mindspring.com %C 1414 22nd Street N.W., Washington, DC 20037 %D 1998 %G 1-56802-271-9 %I Congressional Quarterly Inc. %O U$35.95 +1-800-638-1710 fax +1-202-887-6706 kbeach@cq.com %P 350 p. %T "How to Find Health Information on the Internet" There are two major and important points made before the book starts. The preface notes, and the introduction reiterates, that all information contained in the book, and found on the Internet, should be checked with your doctor. Maxwell is not a physician, and a large amount of the data published on the net is created by people whose level of medical expertise you have no way of checking. Which leads to the second point. The introduction notes that content provided to you may be produced by people who are ignorant, opinionated, biased, or who have a proprietary interest in whatever they are recommending. There are excellent general principles, and even a list of points to check, to try and assess the quality and validity of information or sites that you find. Actually, the title of the book may be slightly misleading. Only part one, the second shortest section of the text, deals with searching for information, and that primarily for general references or resources. There are listings for directories, physicians, hospitals, news sources, libraries, and references. Although AltaVista is mentioned in the preface, there is no content regarding strategies to use when searching for health information using generic search engines or other net resources. Part two looks at specific conditions and diseases, from AIDS to substance abuse. Prevention and treatment discusses alternative medicine to drugs to women's health in part three. A variety of health care related issues have resources listed in part four, such as death, ethics, and health care policies. Grouped under the different specific topics are online resources. Most of these are Web sites, but there are also Usenet newsgroups and mailing lists. All Web sites have been visited and are described as to contents and possible reliability. Newsgroups and mailing lists are described very briefly, and there is little indication that they have been reviewed or observed for any period of time. The index is well organized: even when a specific area of interest is not one of the topic headings related listings should be able to be found. Contrary to popular belief, not all information is available on the Internet. If you have a specific need for medical information it is quite possible that the knowledge you want simply does not exist online. With the decline in interest in shotgun "yellow page" volumes, though, this level of reviewed and higher quality directory information may be very welcome to the growing audience of Web users. copyright Robert M. Slade, 1998 BKHFHIOI.RVW 980731