So I have a few recommendations:
- Put evidence-based treatments on a separate list from non-evidence-based treatments.
- Mandate that evidence-based sources trump other sources.
- Mandate that speculative pages must be very clear about the lack of an evidence base.
- Fix the current treatment pages to accord with these requirements.
- Determine a small group of people to arbitrate disputed pages.
Many of these prescriptions are already in place. There is already a distinction between speculative/theoretical pages and those that are not. We have a category called "medical hypotheses."
http://me-pedia.org/wiki/Methylation_cycle_hypothesis
http://me-pedia.org/wiki/Vagus_nerve_infection_hypothesis
http://me-pedia.org/wiki/Omega_3_fatty_acid_hypothesis
As for pages like "Coffee enemas," I know so many people in the community who use them regularly, it's silly not to have a page even if it is to say: "There is no evidence for the use of coffee enemas." Such a page might explain where the idea comes from and whether there is any evidence of potential risks/harm.
ALL of the sources on these pages are published scientific articles. At least all the ones that I have added. Where there is a popular write up of a study, we post it in the "Learn more" section as a link, since that is more accessible to patients. Where the sources are lower quality (e.g., case studies or uncontrolled), where possible it's listed IN the actual body of the text. What current treatment pages don't accord with these requirements? If you see that, you can simply add the warning code (we can help you) to mark a page as in need of fixing and why. For example, this LDN page definitely needs cleaning up. In particular, there should definitely not be a section on dosing, especially not the section that says "Start Low and Go Slow" since it sounds prescriptive:
http://me-pedia.org/wiki/Low_dose_naltrexone when at the bottom of every page is written the disclaimer, "
The information provided at this site is not intended to diagnose or treat any illness"
I am not sure why just because folks see entries they uncomfortable with on the front page (which yes, maybe shouldn't be the first thing you see when you arrive) they assume that there's a bunch of junk information. Many of these pages are blank or say "there is no evidence..." And if there is evidence, well, then it's cited there.
I don't think it makes sense to sort treatments based on how we feel about them – and really major/minor is a way of doing that in the absence of better evidence. I don't think we should be making those kinds of qualitative judgments. I think we should be linking to research and giving people in line hooks to help evaluate that research, e.g. "in a large, double blind placebo controlled study...," "in a single uncontrolled case study." Many, many pages attempt to do this, again, at least the ones that I have written.
I started MEpedia because PR is largely inaccessible to me. There's a lot of great information here, but it takes an incredible amount of work and reading to extract it from the back and forth conversations. I get very easily dizzy and crashed from scrolling and pagination. So my personal reason for embarking on this project was to make it easier to read the top level summary and then dig deeper if you want to. I also find it incredibly helpful for finding articles I have lost. I wish it could be more helpful in that regard (and could be with more participation). I wish I could engage more in PR but my specific disabilities make that difficult.