Tag Archives: Misinformation

Washington limits Dr.’s license due to COVID misinformation, unethical practices – Idaho News

  1. Washington limits Dr.’s license due to COVID misinformation, unethical practices Idaho News
  2. State of Washington recognizes Dr. Ryan Cole for what he is. Why can’t Idaho? | Opinion Idaho Statesman
  3. Regulators restrict medical license of Idaho health official who spread COVID-19 disinformation East Idaho News
  4. Washington regulators restrict medical license of Idaho doctor who spread COVID-19 disinformation Idaho Capital Sun
  5. Washington restricts license of controversial Idaho doctor for COVID-19 ‘dishonesty’ Idaho Statesman

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TikTok Urged by Jewish Celebs to Address Antisemitism, Misinformation – Variety

  1. TikTok Urged by Jewish Celebs to Address Antisemitism, Misinformation Variety
  2. Jewish Celebrities and Influencers Confront TikTok Executives in Private Call The New York Times
  3. Sacha Baron Cohen Slams TikTok: “Creating Biggest Antisemitic Movement Since the Nazis” Hollywood Reporter
  4. ‘Shame on you’: Sacha Baron Cohen accuses TikTok of ‘creating the biggest antisemitic movement since the Nazis’ New York Post
  5. ‘Shame on you’: Jewish actor slams TikTok as videos on Osama letter go viral India Today
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

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Vaccine trust plunges in U.S., with misinformation drowning out truth: survey – PennLive

  1. Vaccine trust plunges in U.S., with misinformation drowning out truth: survey PennLive
  2. Vaccines on the ballot: a QUARTER of Americans now say Covid-19 shots are unsafe and that they know someone who died from one, as 2024 wannabes DeSantis and RFK Jr. take skepticism on the campaign trail Daily Mail
  3. America Is Gambling With Another Low-Vax Winter The Atlantic
  4. Many Canadians don’t plan on getting COVID booster, flu shots. Experts say that’s ‘unfortunate’ Yahoo Canada Shine On
  5. Killer Jab? 24% Say Someone They Know Died From COVID-19 Vaccine Rasmussen Reports
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

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Misinformation preventing women from getting effective menopause treatment, study finds – The Guardian

  1. Misinformation preventing women from getting effective menopause treatment, study finds The Guardian
  2. Rethinking menopause: Experts call for individualized treatment and more research News-Medical.Net
  3. Largest review ever into menopause care reveals the treatments that DO work – and the ones that are bogus Daily Mail
  4. Misinformation preventing women from effective menopause treatment ABC News
  5. World-renowned menopause experts summarize the state of menopause knowledge and advocate for further research News-Medical.Net
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

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‘Wednesday’ Actor Percy Hynes White Calls Out ‘Campaign of Misinformation’ After Sexual Assault Allegations: ‘The Rumors Are False’ – Variety

  1. ‘Wednesday’ Actor Percy Hynes White Calls Out ‘Campaign of Misinformation’ After Sexual Assault Allegations: ‘The Rumors Are False’ Variety
  2. Percy Hynes White Responds To Sexual Assault Allegations BuzzFeed
  3. Wednesday’s Percy Hynes White Breaks Silence on Sexual Misconduct Allegations TooFab
  4. Wednesday’s Percy Hynes White Denies “Baseless, Harmful” Misconduct Accusations E! NEWS
  5. ‘Wednesday’ Star Percy Hynes White Breaks Silence About Sexual Assault Allegations: ‘The Rumors Are False’ Us Weekly
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

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FDA Commissioner Identifies Misinformation, Implementation of Scientific Knowledge As Biggest Concerns in Health Care

FDA Commissioner Robert Califf said that misinformation is the most common cause of death in the United States.

In the opening session at the American Heart Association 2022 Scientific Sessions, FDA Commissioner Robert Califf, MD, said that tackling misinformation and effectively implementing changes are 2 areas in which the United States is currently falling short.

Biomedical science and technology are in the midst of an amazing period of discovery and development, Califf said, but those advantages are not resulting in improved health outcomes for the US population. Importantly, Califf said the implementation phase is where the medical system is truly falling short.

“We are, and it’s just my opinion of course, failing right now at implementation,” Califf said. “We’re not in first place and we’re losing ground, and we’d better do better for our people.”

The United States spends significantly more money on health care but has worse results than other developed countries, Califf said. For example, life expectancy at birth is now nearly 5 years shorter in the United States than in other high-income countries, and Califf added that China surpassed the United States in life expectancy this year.

These disparities in life expectancy also vary significantly within the United States, with rural regions having significantly shorter life expectancy rates than coastal, urban areas. Importantly, these disparities are expanding rather than improving.

“I believe that this is the biggest trend in America that we need to pay attention to, for a whole variety of reasons,” Califf said.

Drug use is also growing, and Califf emphasized the need to distribute naloxone throughout the country in order to save lives. He compared its distribution to the use of defibrillators, saying that prior to their distribution, many more people died of heart attacks.

Finally, Califf identified tobacco usage as another challenge. More than 480,000 individuals die each year from tobacco use, and 5.6 million children alive today are expected to die prematurely from smoking, Califf said.

To address all of these concerns, Califf said experts must change their approach.

“This word ‘reckoning’ is used a lot right now, and it has a lot of meanings,” Califf said. “I think as American heart people, we’ve got a moment of reckoning right now. We need to do something more than we’re currently doing and something different, because what we’re doing right now is not working.”

To that aim, Califf gave three suggestions. Firstly, he said it is essential to reinvigorate the evidence generation system so that experts know what works and what doesn’t work, with fewer arguments. Secondly, he said the entire health care system must relentlessly focus on interventions that work to tackle the major sources of death and premature loss of function. Finally, he urged all clinicians to spend some time every day tackling misinformation, which he said is directly contributing to the destruction of health and well-being.

“I’ve been going around saying that misinformation is the most common cause of death in the United States,” Califf said. “There is no way to prove that, but I do believe that it is.”

REFERENCE

Adams J, Albert M, Benjamin R, Califf R, Patel M. Moving Science into Public Health: Lessons Learned. Presented at American Heart Association 2022 Scientific Sessions. November 5, 2022.

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‘Pre-bunking’ shows promise in fight against misinformation

Soon after the Russian invasion, the hoaxes began. Ukrainian refugees were taking jobs, committing crimes and abusing handouts. The misinformation spread rapidly online throughout Eastern Europe, sometimes pushed by Moscow in an effort to destabilize its neighbors.

It’s the kind of swift spread of falsehoods that has been blamed in many countries for increased polarization and an erosion of trust in democratic institutions, journalism and science.

But countering or stopping misinformation has proven elusive.

New findings from university researchers and Google, however, reveal that one of the most promising responses to misinformation may also be one of the simplest.

In a paper published Wednesday in the journal Science Advances, the researchers detail how short online videos that teach basic critical thinking skills can make people better able to resist misinformation.

The researchers created a series of videos similar to a public service announcement that focused on specific misinformation techniques — characteristics seen in many common false claims that include emotionally charged language, personal attacks or false comparisons between two unrelated items.

Researchers then gave people a series of claims and found that those who watched the videos were significantly better at distinguishing false information from accurate information.

It’s an approach called “pre-bunking” and it builds on years of research into an idea known as inoculation theory that suggests exposing people to how misinformation works, using harmless, fictional examples, can boost their defenses to false claims.

With the findings in hand, Google plans to roll out a series of pre-bunking videos soon in Eastern Europe focused on scapegoating, which can be seen in much of the misinformation about Ukrainian refugees. That focus was chosen by Jigsaw, a division of Google that works to find new ways to address misinformation and extremism.

“We have spent quite a bit of time and energy studying the problem,” said Beth Goldberg, Jigsaw’s head of research and one of the authors of the paper. “We started thinking: How can we make the users, the people online, more resilient to misinformation?”

The two-minute clips then demonstrate how these tactics can show up in headlines, or social media posts, to make a person believe something that isn’t true.

They’re surprisingly effective. Subjects who viewed the videos were found to be significantly better at distinguishing false claims from accurate information when tested by the researchers. The same positive results occurred when the experiment was replicated on YouTube, where nearly 1 million people viewed the videos.

Researchers are now investigating how long the effects last, and whether “booster” videos can help sustain the benefits.

Earlier findings have suggested that online games or tutorials that teach critical thinking skills can also improve resiliency to misinformation. But videos, which could be played alongside online advertisements, are likely to reach many more people, said Jon Roozenbeek, a Cambridge University professor and one of the authors of the study.

Other authors included researchers at the University of Bristol in the U.K. and the University of Western Australia.

Google’s effort will be one of the largest real-world tests of pre-bunking so far. The videos will be released on YouTube, Facebook and TikTok, in Poland, the Czech Republic and Slovakia. All three countries have accepted large numbers of Ukrainian refugees and their citizens could be vulnerable to misinformation about refugees.

Jigsaw CEO Yasmin Green said the work on prebunking is intended to complement Google’s other efforts to reduce the spread of misinformation: “As the scourge of misinformation grows, there’s a lot more we can do to provide people with prompts and features that help them stay safe and informed online.”

While journalistic fact checks can be effective in debunking a particular piece of misinformation, they’re time and labor intensive. By focusing on characteristics of misinformation in general instead of specific claims, pre-bunking videos can help a person spot false claims on a wider variety of topics.

Another method, content moderation by social media companies, can often be inconsistent. While platforms like Facebook and Twitter often remove misinformation that violates their rules, they’re also criticized for failing to do more. Other platforms like Telegram or Gab boast a largely hands-off approach to misinformation.

Social media content moderation and journalistic fact checks can also run the risk of alienating those who believe the misinformation. They might also be ignored by people who already distrust legitimate news outlets.

“The word fact checking itself has become politicized,” Roozenbeek said.

Pre-bunking videos, however, don’t target specific claims, and they make no assertions about what is true or not. Instead, they teach the viewer how false claims work in general — whether it’s a claim about elections or NASA’s moon landings, or the latest outbreak of the avian flu.

That transferability makes pre-bunking a particularly effective way of confronting misinformation, according to John Cook, a research professor at Australia’s Monash University who has created online games that teach ways to spot misinformation.

“We’ve done enough research to know this can be effective,” Cook said. “What we need now is the resources to deploy this at scale.”

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Woman with monkeypox slams shocking sex ‘misinformation’

A Georgia woman diagnosed with monkeypox said she didn’t contract the “painful” virus via sex — and is using TikTok to fight “misinformation” about the disease.

Camille Seaton, 20, began feeling unwell partway through July and rushed to a hospital when she noticed blisters breaking out on her face.

The young mother was subsequently stunned when she tested positive for the virus — declared a public health emergency in the United States earlier this month.

Monkeypox, which is spreading across the US following an outbreak in Europe this spring, is primarily impacting gay and bisexual men, who account for about 98% of patients, according to NYU biologist Joseph Osmundson.

Seaton — who is the first female to be officially diagnosed in the Peach State — works as a gas station attendant and said she believes she contracted the virus while handling “dirty money” at her job, according to a now-viral video with more than a million views.

Camille Seaton, 20, has gone viral on TikTok after detailing her battle with monkeypox. The young mom says she believed she contracted the virus while working in a gas station.
Jam Press Vid/Camille Seaton/Lif

The mom spent more than two weeks isolated at her townhouse, with her 3-year-old daughter being cared for by other family members.

Seaton additionally told the publication that her monkeypox symptoms were serious, saying: “I was in pain literally all of the time.”

“It was itching. It was joint pain. It was excruciating headaches. It was fainting. You have to go through so much before you even start the healing process,” she added.

At home alone, Seaton turned to social media to fight misinformation about the virus, sharing TikTok clips.

The mom spent more than two weeks isolated at her townhouse, with her 3-year-old daughter being cared for by other family members.
Jam Press Vid/Camille Seaton/Lif

In the viral video, Seaton states: “I’m here to tell you again that sex is not the only way to contract this virus. Yes, it’s mostly been men who have gotten it – I’m only the first woman to have gotten it in the state of Georgia – but all people are different.”

“This is no joke,” she further warned. “Wash your hands, wear masks, stop touching people, wear gloves.”

She continued: “The virus isn’t airborne but it might as well be. You can catch it from sitting in a confined space with somebody that has it – a car, a plane, a room.”

Monkeypox outbreak: Where the US stands now

Health agencies in the US have counted at least 6,600 cases of suspected monkeypox — with another 1,000 cases expected to be added next week, according to epidemiological forecasters. Among the nation’s illness epicenters, New York City is battling more than 1,400 cases following an outbreak in June.

At the same time, the World Health Organization is reporting over 26,000 cases of the disease.

Exactly how and why the once “rare and unusual” virus has cropped up, and subsequently spread across continents, remains a mystery.

Dr. John Whyte, chief medical officer of WebMD, told The Post that doctors “are still learning about it,” but reassured patients of their worst fears. “We haven’t known [the current outbreak] to be fatal. And that’s a good thing,” Whyte said.

The virus, which is spreading across the US following an outbreak in Europe, is primarily impacting gay and bisexual men — with Seaton the first female to be officially diagnosed in the Peach State.
Jam Press Vid/Camille Seaton/Lif
“I’m here to tell you again that sex is not the only way to contract this virus:” Seaton’s videos tackle misconceptions about the virus.
Jam Press Vid/Camille Seaton/Lif

Meanwhile, after Seaton posted her now-viral video, many people took to the comments section of the clip thanking Seaton for raising awareness about the misconceptions surrounding monkeypox.

“I’m so sorry this happened to you. We do have to be more careful. Thank you so much for sharing your journey & educating people re: your experience,” one stated.

The young mom has now beaten the virus, according to an Insider report. She has reunited with her daughter and has returned to work.

While women make up a very small number of people contracting monkeypox, Seaton is not the first female to document her battle with the virus on TikTok.

“Wash your hands, wear masks, stop touching people, wear gloves:” Seaton urged viewers to improve their hygiene practices.
Jam Press Vid/Camille Seaton/Lif

A New Yorker named Lou has also spoken out on the social media site, similarly saying the virus was extremely painful.

She expressed pain to the point where she said she could only drink “protein drinks” and that it was difficult to talk. “I can’t eat. I can’t brush my teeth. I can barely talk,” she said.

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Diablo Immortal director wants it judged on merits not microtransaction “misinformation”

Diablo Immortal is being pilloried by players for the price of its microtransactions, and for how closely tied your progress is to spending real money. One player on the game’s Reddit page has suggested that it would cost between $50k-$80k (around £39k-£64k) to fully max out a character in the free-to-play action RPG. Meanwhile, the game’s director has been responding to feedback on Twitter in an attempt to address those “not liking a game based on misinformation surrounding it.”

Covid Vaccine Misinformation Still Fuels Fears Surrounding Pregnancy, a New Study Finds.

About 30 percent of pregnant women in the United States remain unvaccinated, according to estimates from the C.D.C.

“We know pregnant individuals are at an increased risk when it comes to Covid-19, but they absolutely should not and do not have to die from it,” said Dr. Christopher Zahn, chief of clinical practice and health equity and quality at the American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists.

Kaiser researchers found that among women who were pregnant or planning to become pregnant: 60 percent believed that pregnant women should not get the vaccine, or were unsure if this was true; and about the same number believed, or were unsure, whether the vaccines had been shown to cause infertility. While only 16 percent said they believed the false infertility claim outright, another 44 percent said they were unsure if it were true.

Torrents of misinformation during the pandemic have repeatedly disrupted public health campaigns. Previous spikes in falsehoods spread doubts about vaccines, masks and the severity of the virus, and undermined best practices for controlling the spread of the coronavirus, health experts said, noting that misinformation was a key factor in vaccine hesitancy. Dr. Vivek Murthy, the U.S. surgeon general, has demanded information from tech companies about the major sources of Covid-19 misinformation.

One reason misinformation about the vaccines and pregnancy may have gained so much traction, experts say, is that the earliest clinical trials of the coronavirus vaccines excluded pregnant women. The lack of trial data led the C.D.C. and World Health Organization to initially give different recommendations to pregnant women, though neither explicitly forbade, nor encouraged, immunizing pregnant women. Other health organizations chose to wait for more safety data from later trials before making an official recommendation for pregnant women to get vaccinated.

“Unfortunately, in the interim, the information gap was filled with a lot of misinformation, particularly on social media, and that has been an uphill battle to combat,” Dr. Zahn said. “While we have made a lot of progress with uptake among pregnant individuals in the last year, there was also a lot of time lost.”

Researchers have pointed for years to the proliferation of anti-vaccine misinformation on social networks as a factor in vaccine hesitancy and in the lower rates of Covid-19 vaccine adoption in more conservative states.

“At the root of this problem is trust, or really, it’s a lack of trust,” Dr. Sell said. “Trusted doctors need to help support women in understanding the importance of vaccination against Covid as well as its safety. But when people don’t have trust in authorities, no provider to go to, or generally don’t feel like they have a place to get good information, this misinformation can fill that void.”

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