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Ethical conduct
ensuring privacy and confidentiality of the patient is one of the
cornerstones of medical practice. Selling drugs over the Internet obviously
necessitates the collection and use of confidential medical information. In
an anarchic world over the Internet, nobody can be sure of what happens to
this information. Moreover, the security of electronic transactions is
difficult to assess. Electronic environments inevitably carry significant
non-zero probabilities of large information losses once a security breach
has occurred. Cases of Cyber-pharmacies not keeping privacy and
confidentiality promises have also been reported. Other issues like Trust
have also been raised. Studies reveal that trust in drug information from
traditional media sources such as television and newspapers transfers to the
domain of the Internet, leading to utilization of the Internet for
information search after exposure to prescription drug advertising. Bernall J. BIG BROTHER IS ON-LINE: Public and Private Security in the Internet Cybersociology 06 Aug. 1999 also available online at: http://www.socio.demon.co.uk/magazine/7/bigbrother.htmlCushman R. Serious Technology Assessment for Health Care Information TechnologyJ Am Med Inform Assoc. 1997 July; 4 (4): 259-265 [Free Full Text at PubMedCentral] http://www.pubmedcentral.nih.gov/articlerender.fcgi?artid=61243Online Pharmacies Settle FTC Charges http://www.ftc.gov/opa/2000/07/iog.htmMenon AM, Deshpande AD, Perri M 3rd, Zinkhan GM. Trust in online prescription drug information among internet users: the impact on information search behavior after exposure to direct-to-consumer advertising.Health Mark Q 2002;20(1):17-35 |
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