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WHY
“MEDLINE” IS OBSOLETE
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Medline Obsolete
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Medline
Obsolescence
by Andrew
W. Saul and Steve Hickey
(Reprinted with permission from J Orthomolecular Med, 2007. Vol 22, No 4, p 171-174.) “Freedom of the press is guaranteed only to
those who own one.” (Abbott
Joseph Liebling, New Yorker, 4 May 1960) By
excluding the Journal of Orthomolecular
Medicine and certain other journals from its Medline/PubMed indexing services,
the U.S. National Library of Medicine (NLM) has limited doctors’ access
to information. At one time, limits were understandable; only 239 journals
were indexed when Medline first went online in 1971. Medline became freely
available on the Internet in June of 1997, and now, ten years later, indexes
over 5,000 journals. Interestingly, it is the Internet itself that has made
Medline obsolete. The ‘net offers numerous search engines and indexing
services for professionals and public alike. Preeminent among these is Google
Scholar. Google Scholar The
meteoric rise of Google over the last decade has helped people instantly
access a substantial proportion of the world’s knowledge. As Google has
become more successful, it has diversified into specialist areas. One of its
more recent search engines, Google Scholar (http://scholar.google.com), is now a
primary resource for scientists and academics. Google Scholar
indexes Medline itself, but this constitutes only a fraction of its
information base. Google Scholar will also show webpages for a journal, the
authors, and frequently an independent PDF copy of the article itself.
Furthermore, Google Scholar allows libraries and publishers to index their
collections, including abstracts and direct links to obtain the complete
article. Google Scholar also indexes government sites, university lecture
notes, academic presentations, scientific conferences and, potentially, any
relevant material available or linked to the Internet. With the
advent of Google Scholar, medical information access has reached a tipping
point.[i]
It is no longer possible for agencies such as NLM to control rapid access to
journals it chooses to exclude. Those
who want information can find it just as fast via Google Scholar as they can
with Medline, and Google Scholar is far more comprehensive. That is why, for
many researchers, Google Scholar provides the initial portal for online
searches. Google Scholar indexes the Journal
of Orthomolecular Medicine. Indeed, any Internet search engine can find
the new online JOM archives at http://orthomolecular.org/library/jom. The French Institute of Scientific and Technical
Information (Cat.inist)
searches “about 13 million bibliographic records of documents held in
the INIST/CNRS collections and covering all fields of worldwide research.”
(http://international.inist.fr/rubrique4.html)
It is provided by the Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique, part of EBSCOhost
(http://www.epnet.com/titleLists/aw-complete.htm)
and the Allied and Complementary Medicine Database (AMED) (http://www.bl.uk/collections/health/amed.html)
also index JOM. But not
the U.S. National Library of Medicine. To be fair, it must be admitted that
in May 2007, NLM acknowledged that it does have JOM on its shelves, saying in correspondence: “While
we hold the Journal of Orthomolecular Medicine
in our print collection here at NLM, it is not currently indexed for
MEDLINE/PubMed.” One might
well wonder why NLM, a taxpayer-supported public library, physically archives
a journal, and yet refuses to index it. JOM
Associate Editor Harold Foster has wryly observed that “Medline treats
the Journal like a dirty magazine:
to be read privately, but the fact kept hidden from the public.” The old information age Researchers
have found it hard to publish research on nutritional medicine since the 1960’s.
Abram Hoffer, a psychiatrist with a PhD in biochemistry, reported that
content, not quality, of research was the primary disqualification. For
example, a representative of the Journal
of the American Psychiatric Association told Hoffer that the journal
would never publish articles from his group. In response, the US and Canadian
Schizophrenia Associations started the Journal
of Schizophrenia, later the Journal
of Orthomolecular Psychiatry, to provide a vehicle for research into
nutrition and psychiatry. As interest in nutritional medicine expanded, the
name was changed to the Journal of
Orthomolecular Medicine. NLM’s
reluctance to index JOM may be
historical, rooted in the controversy ensuing from Linus Pauling’s
promotion of vitamin C. Notably, Pauling coined the term orthomolecular in an influential paper to Science in 1968.[ii]
However, if Hoffer is correct that Medline excludes journals based on
content, then medical practitioners and scientists interested in the
therapeutic uses of nutritional substances are being denied access to the
relevant literature. Papers in this and related disciplines are indexed only
when published in journals such as Medical
Hypotheses, which Medline deems acceptable. Medline
is a selective filter, aimed at physicians and academics who are too busy to
manually trawl the literature. The benefits are obvious, the dangers less so.
In legal matters, defendants would be ill served if their attorneys relied on
an electronic database of some
court cases. In medical research, progress depends on the availability of a
broad range of information. If sources are limited, then searches are biased
and patients will suffer. Medline
limits access to scientific data by exercising control over which journals it
includes. Bland extraneous publications, like Reader’s Digest or The Times
newspaper, are included. Conversely, important publications that show
maverick tendencies, such as the
Journal of American Physicians and Surgeons, Medical Veritas, and the Journal
of Nutritional and Ecological Medicine, are excluded from Medline. The
idea that the Reader’s Digest
is of greater clinical utility than these journals is clearly absurd. NLM
excludes journals by employing a Literature Selection Technical Review
Committee (LSTRC). Since Medline’s inclusion criteria are vague,
committee members exercise a high degree of subjective choice.[iii]
Proposers of rejected journals receive the results of a simple point system,
without detailed justification of the reasons for exclusion. There are no
hearings, no public input, and no appeal mechanism to challenge the decision. Members
of the LSTRC are selected, privately, for eminence in particular fields of
study. Such selection is an established method for biasing group decisions.[iv],[v]
In legal cases, both prosecution and defense lawyers have the right to
exclude jurors.[vi]
Neilson and Wilson studied the effectiveness of such “peremptory
challenges”.[vii]
They found that if the defendant belongs to a minority group, and wrongful
conviction charges are large, then it may be optimal to allow the defense to
exclude more jurors. By analogy, a minority view such as orthomolecular
medicine should be given fair representation on the committee. In fact,
orthomolecular medicine does not have any
representation on NLM’s Literature Selection Technical Review
Committee. Selection
of Medline review committee members allows them to be chosen to represent a
particular viewpoint. For example, avoiding indexing journals in the
orthomolecular field might involve selecting doctors with a disdain of
alternative and complementary medicine. All committee members are appointed
by NLM. Notably, when asked, NLM was unable to provide details of any committee member with a background
in orthomolecular medicine.[viii]
This suggests that, at best, the Medline committee lacks experience in the
fields it is reviewing. The new information age
Until
recently, Medline’s suppression of publications, such as the journal Fluoride (the
journal of the International
Society for Fluoride Research), was a powerful restriction of data that challenged the medical
status quo. However, the advent of the Internet has opened up vast
informational resources to the public. This explosion of data availability is
unstructured and largely uncensored. The result is an abundance of health
information sources of widely variable quality. Until
recently, most patients had limited access to medical information and, to a
greater or lesser extent, were subject to screening and interpretation by
medical practitioners. Nowadays, however, it is possible for patients to
truly be more informed about their disease and its treatment than their
doctor is. This changes the doctor-patient relationship. A major criticism of
such increasing patient empowerment is the lack of quality control on the
Internet. Even if patients find an accurate site, they may not have
sufficient understanding or experience to apply the information to their
particular condition. The
counter-argument has been described as the “wisdom of crowds”,
which is related to the cybernetic concept of requisite variety.[ix],[x]
Surprisingly, it has been shown that a population of independent agents can
be more effective at analyzing data than any single expert.[xi],[xii]
This finding underpins economic free market systems. Any single person might
be mistaken, but, on average, a diverse group of independent individuals can
present a more accurate and complete interpretation of the available data.
Abraham Lincoln was right: you cannot fool all of the people all of the time.
Those
physicians complaining about patients accessing the Internet for information
may be chastened by the thought that, on average, their patients may be more
right than wrong. Such “wisdom of crowds” effects have promoted
and sustained orthomolecular medicine since its inception. Medline’s dominance ends
When it
began in 1971, Medline was the only game in town. We are now witnessing the
end of Medline’s era as the premiere source of medical information.
While it remains heavily used, it is fast losing its dominance to Google
Scholar. Given time, additional indexing services will enhance delivery of
information to doctors, scientists and medical professionals. Authors can overcome censorship of individual journals by
publishing elsewhere or by starting their own journals. However,
scientists’ careers depend on the visibility of the papers they
publish. Medline exerted a powerful disincentive for career-minded scientists
to submit papers to excluded journals. Journals indexed by Medline have had
greater prestige. Inclusion of a paper in Medline meant that it would be
noticed more easily, and referenced more often. Medline was not just
censoring the journal’s output; it was also preventing papers being
submitted to excluded journals. The U. S.
National Library of Medicine appears to have forgotten that human beings are
historically intolerant of censorship, and have rarely responded positively
to it. "In the long run of history,” wrote Alfred Whitney
Griswold, “the censor and the inquisitor have always lost.” (13) We are
now entering a new era of medical informatics. The wide availability of
information on the safety and effectiveness of nutritional therapies is
changing healthcare. People have tried orthomolecular medicine for themselves
and found it effective. Before too long, the wisdom of patients, backed by
the pressure of hundreds of millions of Google Scholar searches, may drag
conventional doctors, kicking and screaming, into the orthomolecular
information age. It will
be a birth worth attending. (References cited are at the very bottom of this page.) Andrew Saul is the author of the books FIRE YOUR
DOCTOR! How to be Independently
Healthy (reader reviews at http://www.doctoryourself.com/review.html
) and DOCTOR YOURSELF: Natural Healing that Works. (reviewed at http://www.doctoryourself.com/saulbooks.html
) For ordering information, Click
here . |
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AN IMPORTANT NOTE: This page is not in any way offered as prescription, diagnosis nor treatment for any disease, illness, infirmity or physical condition. Any form of self-treatment or alternative health program necessarily must involve an individual's acceptance of some risk, and no one should assume otherwise. Persons needing medical care should obtain it from a physician. Consult your doctor before making any health decision. Neither the author nor the webmaster has authorized the use of their names or the use of any material contained within in connection with the sale, promotion or advertising of any product or apparatus. Single-copy reproduction for individual, non-commercial use is permitted providing no alterations of content are made, and credit is given. |
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[i] Gladwell
M. (2002) The Tipping Point: How Little Things Can Make a Big Difference,
[ii] Pauling
L. (1968) Orthomolecular psychiatry. Varying the concentrations of substances
normally present in the human body may control mental disease, Science,
160(825), 265-271.
[iii] Saul AW. (2006) Medline bias: update, J Orthomolecular Med, 21(2), 67.
[iv] Hoffman
M.B. Pizzi W.T. (2001) Jury Selection Errors on Appeal, American Criminal Law
Review, Vol. 38.
[v] Barber
J.W. (1994) The jury is still out: the role of jury science in the modern
American courtroom, Am Crim L Rev, Vol 31, 1225.
[vi] Hafmeister T.L. (2000) Supreme court
examines impact of errors in detecting bias during jury selection, Legal
report, Violence and Victims, 15(2), 209-223.
[vii] William S. Neilsona W.S. Winter H. (2000) Bias and the economics of jury selection, International Review of Law and Economics, 20, 223–250.
[viii] Saul
A.W. (2005) Medline bias. [Editorial] J Orthomolecular Med, 20(1), 10-16.
[ix]
Surowiecki J. (2005) The Wisdom of Crowds, Anchor.
[x] Ashby W.R. (1956) Introduction to Cybernetics, Chapman & Hall
[xi]
Gigerenzer G. Todd P.M. ABC Research
Group (2000) Simple Heuristics That Make Us Smart,
[xii]
Sunstein C.R. (2006) Infotopia: How Many
Minds Produce Knowledge,
13. New York Times, 24 February 1959.