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Search Home : Society : Issues : Health : Fraud : Quackery See Also:
- "Operation Cure-all" Targets Internet Health Fraud: FTC law enforcement and consumer education campaign focuses on stopping the quacks.
- American Council of Science and Health: Press releases and articles related to health care fraud and quackery.
- Avoiding Quackery: Offers an Online book with tips on how to protect yourself from quackery.
- Bunko Squad: Tips and resources on how to spot quackery.
- Canadian Quackery Watch: Monitors the media for reports of medical frauds and quacks. Includes features on individual quacks, pending lawsuits, scientific rebuttals of 'dubious' claims, and related links.
- Cataract Surgery Fraud: Information about fraud in advertising for cataract surgery.
- Center for Quackery Control: Challenges the claims of alternative healers, psychics, and other quacks.
- Chirobase Practices: Skeptical guide to chiropractic history, theories, and current practices.
- FDA Backgrounder: The FDA Backgrounder lists the most common kinds of health fraud. Provides advice on how to spot a quack and where to file a complaint.
- Fraud and Quackery Internet Resources: Listing of useful web sites related to compiling health care fraud reports.
- Fraud in Health Care Links: Helps identifying web sites that offer fraudulent health products and services.
- Health Quackery: Provides information on how to spot health quackery.
- National Council Against Health Fraud, Inc.: The NCAHF is a USA voluntary health agency that focuses its attention upon health fraud, misinformation and quackery as public health problems.
- Quackwatch: Covers unproven and scientifically questionable claims of alternative health therapies, vitamin peddlers, and other health frauds.
- Spotting Health Fraud: Easy understandable list on how to check health care web sites that promise treatment success too fast and too easy.
- U.S. Food and Drug Administration: Easy-to-read FDA publication about phony medicines and unproven treatments.
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