Quackdown Explained

Quackdown
Size:200
Formation:2011
Type:Non-profit website
Location:South Africa
Language:English
Leader Title:Editors
Leader Name:Nathan Geffen, Marcus Low
Affiliations:Treatment Action Campaign
Community Media Trust
Website:quackdown.info
Remarks:inactive

Quackdown is a South Africa-based website aimed at exposing fraudulent and untested medical treatments. It hosts the "Quackbase" database of untested medical claims and publishes articles on quackery.[1]

Quackdown is a joint project of the Treatment Action Campaign, Community Media Trust and several individuals. It was originally edited by Nathan Geffen, Marcus Low and Catherine Tomlinson, but since December 2012 Catherine Tomlinson is no longer an editor of Quackdown.[2]

In October 2012, the South African medicine company Solal Technologies filed a defamation lawsuit against Kevin Charleston due to a Quackdown article he published that denounces the company's magazine Health Intelligence for quackery and pseudoscience.[3]

As of 2022 the website appears to be inactive as the Quackbase database was last updated in 2012 and the most recent article on the website dated from 2014. In addition, their twitter account, @quackbase, has not been active since 2012.[4]

External links

Notes and References

  1. News: New website "Quackdown". 29 December 2014. i-base.info. 19 May 2011.
  2. Web site: About Quackbase . Quackdown! . 7 March 2022.
  3. News: Kahn. Tamar. Solal Technologies to sue over 'quack' claims. 7 March 2022. Business Day. 12 October 2012. https://web.archive.org/web/20121014000607/http://www.bdlive.co.za/national/health/2012/10/12/solal-technologies-to-sue-over-quack-claims. 14 October 2012. dead.
  4. Web site: Quackbase . Twitter . 14 May 2017 . 7 March 2022.