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Coronavirus

 
 
hightor
 
  3  
Thu 29 Dec, 2022 06:06 am
As Covid-19 Continues to Spread, So Does Misinformation About It

Doctors are exasperated by the persistence of false and misleading claims about the virus.

Quote:
Nearly three years into the pandemic, Covid-19 remains stubbornly persistent. So, too, does misinformation about the virus.

As Covid cases, hospitalizations and deaths rise in parts of the country, myths and misleading narratives continue to evolve and spread, exasperating overburdened doctors and evading content moderators.

What began in 2020 as rumors that cast doubt on the existence or seriousness of Covid quickly evolved into often outlandish claims about dangerous technology lurking in masks and the supposed miracle cures from unproven drugs, like ivermectin. Last year’s vaccine rollout fueled another wave of unfounded alarm. Now, in addition to all the claims still being bandied about, there are conspiracy theories about the long-term effects of the treatments, researchers say.

The ideas still thrive on social media platforms, and the constant barrage, now a yearslong accumulation, has made it increasingly difficult for accurate advice to break through, misinformation researchers say. That leaves people already suffering from pandemic fatigue to become further inured to Covid’s continuing dangers and susceptible to other harmful medical content.

“It’s easy to forget that health misinformation, including about Covid, can still contribute to people not getting vaccinated or creating stigmas,” said Megan Marrelli, the editorial director of Meedan, a nonprofit focused on digital literacy and information access. “We know for a fact that health misinformation contributes to the spread of real-world disease.”

Twitter is of particular concern for researchers. The company recently gutted the teams responsible for keeping dangerous or inaccurate material in check on the platform, stopped enforcing its Covid misinformation policy and began basing some content moderation decisions on public polls posted by its new owner and chief executive, the billionaire Elon Musk.

From Nov. 1 to Dec. 5, Australian researchers collected more than half a million conspiratorial and misleading English-language tweets about Covid, using terms such as “deep state,” “hoax” and “bioweapon.” The tweets drew more than 1.6 million likes and 580,000 retweets.

The researchers said the volume of toxic material surged late last month with the release of a film that included baseless claims that Covid vaccines set off “the greatest orchestrated die-off in the history of the world.”

Naomi Smith, a sociologist at Federation University Australia who helped conduct the research with Timothy Graham, a digital media expert at Queensland University of Technology, said Twitter’s misinformation policies helped tamp down anti-vaccination content that had been common on the platform in 2015 and 2016. From January 2020 to September 2022, Twitter suspended more than 11,000 accounts over violations of its Covid misinformation policy.

Now, Dr. Smith said, the protective barriers are “falling over in real time, which is both interesting as an academic and absolutely terrifying.”

“Pre-Covid, people who believed in medical misinformation were generally just talking to each other, contained within their own little bubble, and you had to go and do a bit of work to find that bubble,” she said. “But now, you don’t have to do any work to find that information — it is presented in your feed with any other types of information.”

Several prominent Twitter accounts that had been suspended for spreading unfounded claims about Covid have were reinstated in recent weeks, including those of Representative Marjorie Taylor Greene, a Georgia Republican, and Robert Malone, a vaccine skeptic.

Mr. Musk himself has used Twitter to weigh in on the pandemic, predicting in March 2020 that the United States was likely to have “close to zero new cases” by the end of that April. (More than 100,000 positive tests were reported to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention in the last week of the month.) This month, he took aim at Dr. Anthony S. Fauci, who will soon step down as President Biden’s top medical adviser and the longtime director of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases. Mr. Musk said Dr. Fauci should be prosecuted.

Twitter did not respond to a request for comment. Other major social platforms, including TikTok and YouTube, said last week that they remained committed to combating Covid misinformation.

YouTube prohibits content — including videos, comments and links — about vaccines and Covid-19 that contradicts recommendations from the local health authorities or the World Health Organization. Facebook’s policy on Covid-19 content is more than 4,500 words long. TikTok said it had removed more than 250,000 videos for Covid misinformation and worked with partners such as its content advisory council to develop its policies and enforcement strategies. (Mr. Musk disbanded Twitter’s advisory council this month.)

But the platforms have struggled to enforce their Covid rules.

Newsguard, an organization that tracks online misinformation, found this fall that typing “covid vaccine” into TikTok caused it to suggest searches for “covid vaccine injury” and “covid vaccine warning,” while the same query on Google led to recommendations for “walk-in covid vaccine” and “types of covid vaccines.” One search on TikTok for “mRNA vaccine” brought up five videos containing false claims within the first 10 results, according to researchers. TikTok said in a statement that its community guidelines “make clear that we do not allow harmful misinformation, including medical misinformation, and we will remove it from the platform.”

In years past, people would get medical advice from neighbors, or try to self-diagnose via Google search, said Dr. Anish Agarwal, an emergency physician in Philadelphia. Now, years into the pandemic, he still gets patients who believe “crazy” claims on social media that Covid vaccines will insert robots into their arms.

“We battle that every single day,” said Dr. Agarwal, who teaches at the University of Pennsylvania’s Perelman School of Medicine and serves as deputy director of Penn Medicine’s Center for Digital Health.

Online and offline discussions of the coronavirus are constantly shifting, with patients bringing him questions lately about booster shots and long Covid, Dr. Agarwal said. He has a grant from the National Institutes of Health to study the Covid-related social media habits of different populations.

“Moving forward, understanding our behaviors and thoughts around Covid will probably also shine light on how individuals interact with other health information on social media, how we can actually use social media to combat misinformation,” he said.

Years of lies and rumors about Covid have had a contagion effect, damaging public acceptance of all vaccines, said Heidi J. Larson, the director of the Vaccine Confidence Project at the London School of Hygiene & Tropical Medicine.

“The Covid rumors are not going to go away — they’re going to get repurposed, and they’re going to adapt,” she said. “We can’t delete this. No one company can fix this.”

Some efforts to slow the spread of misinformation about the virus have bumped up against First Amendment concerns.

A law that California passed several months ago, and that is set to take effect next month, would punish doctors for spreading false information about Covid vaccines. It already faces legal challenges from plaintiffs who describe the regulation as an unconstitutional infringement of free speech. Tech companies including Meta, Google and Twitter have faced lawsuits this year from people who were barred over Covid misinformation and claim that the companies overreached in their content moderation efforts, while other suits have accused the platforms of not doing enough to rein in misleading narratives about the pandemic.

Dr. Graham Walker, an emergency physician in San Francisco, said the rumors spreading online about the pandemic drove him and many of his colleagues to social media to try to correct inaccuracies. He has posted several Twitter threads with more than a hundred evidence-packed tweets trying to debunk misinformation about the coronavirus.

But this year, he said he felt increasingly defeated by the onslaught of toxic content about a variety of medical issues. He left Twitter after the company abandoned its Covid misinformation policy.

“I began to think that this was not a winning battle,” he said. “It doesn’t feel like a fair fight.”

Now, Dr. Walker said, he is watching as a “tripledemic” of Covid-19, R.S.V. and influenza bombards the health care system, causing emergency room waits in some hospitals to surge from less than an hour to six hours. Misinformation about easily available treatments is at least partly responsible, he said.

“If we had a larger uptick in vaccinations with the most recent vaccines, we probably would have a smaller number of people getting extremely ill with Covid, and that’s certainly going to make a dent in hospitalization numbers,” he said. “Honestly, at this point, we will take any dent we can get.”

nyt
hightor
 
  2  
Thu 29 Dec, 2022 06:08 am
@jcboy,
Wishing you a solid recovery, jcboy.
Region Philbis
 
  1  
Thu 29 Dec, 2022 06:09 am
@hightor,

a couple folks on here need to be reminded yet again...

https://iili.io/HTgvlHX.jpg
izzythepush
 
  1  
Thu 29 Dec, 2022 06:24 am
@Region Philbis,
You can add toggling, magnetism and "awareness" to the list of things that don't disprove or prove anything.
0 Replies
 
jcboy
 
  3  
Thu 29 Dec, 2022 01:04 pm
@hightor,
Thank you, still getting over this but it's getting better each day, you know I have a friend that has had COVID five times now! he gets sick with a flu and tests positive and is only sick for a couple days and he's over it. A girlfriend of mine got it and it took eight months for her to fully recover.
0 Replies
 
Yalow
 
  1  
Thu 29 Dec, 2022 04:00 pm
@izzythepush,
Quote:
And don't pay any attention to the dunny fisherman, he eats all he catches!

Laughing
Is this part of some sort of British culture, or is the phrase uniquely your invention?
Builder
 
  0  
Thu 29 Dec, 2022 04:13 pm
@Region Philbis,
Quote:
a couple folks on here need to be reminded yet again...


You must have missed the memo. Not only did Pfizer lie about the jabs stopping transmission, they somehow came up with a "vaccine" in just three days. Funny how things can get twisted, when there's tens of billions of dollars on the table.

Quote:
“Has Pfizer had access to coronavirus before December 2019, when we (came to) knew about it? The whole world found out about the coronavirus in December 2019. On January 11, 2020, the Chinese government published the genetic data of this virus.
“But in the data that you (Pfizer) submitted to European Medicines Agency in order to receive marketing authorisation, you provided data showing you tested your medical product on January 14, 2020. How is it possible that in three days, after the whole world found about the genetic data of this virus, your company already tested the vaccine on mice,” Terhes asked in a question the answer to which could change the whole narrative on the discovery of the virus.


https://www.timesnownews.com/world/did-pfizer-have-access-to-coronavirus-before-china-discovered-it-did-moderna-test-covid-vaccine-in-2017-romanian-mep-makes-shocking-allegations-article-94834136
izzythepush
 
  1  
Thu 29 Dec, 2022 04:17 pm
@Yalow,
Dunnies are Australian.

You can always google words.
Yalow
 
  1  
Thu 29 Dec, 2022 04:23 pm
@izzythepush,
Quote:
You can always google words.

Did...
0 Replies
 
jcboy
 
  3  
Sun 1 Jan, 2023 09:30 am
This isn't going away anytime soon!

CDC reports a new strain of omicron taking over in the U.S.

Quote:
A new version of omicron has taken hold in the U.S., according to the most recent data from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. The subvariant of omicron, named XBB.1.5, has raised concerns about another potential wave of Covid cases following the busy holiday travel season.

The CDC projected Friday that about 40% of confirmed U.S. Covid cases are caused by the XBB.1.5 strain, up from 20% a week ago. In the Northeast, about 75% of confirmed cases are reported to be XBB.1.5.

It’s not clear yet where this version of omicron came from, but it appears to be spreading quickly here. There’s no indication it causes more severe illness than any other omicron virus, Dr. Barbara Mahon, director of CDC’s Coronavirus and Other Respiratory Viruses Division, told NBC News.

joe 2nation
 
  3  
Sun 1 Jan, 2023 11:29 am
@Builder,
Hmmm. You seem to think Pfizer, a major drug company with access to massive computer power, involved for the past four decades in virus research, couldn't run a detailed analysis on the Chinese provided data in three days?

Shucks, they probably had preliminary choices to test within the first few hours.
Joe (welcome to the modern world of research) Nation
Builder
 
  -2  
Sun 1 Jan, 2023 03:08 pm
@joe 2nation,
Oh, you mean this pfizzer?

Joe (pull your head out of your arse and smell the roses) nation.
Wilso
 
  5  
Sun 1 Jan, 2023 04:03 pm
@Builder,
Somewhere a tree exists just to provide you oxygen. You owe that tree a fvcking apology.
0 Replies
 
Glennn
 
  -2  
Sun 1 Jan, 2023 04:28 pm
@Builder,
Quote:
Oh, you mean this pfizzer?

Joe (pull your head out of your arse and smell the roses) nation.

Some people have a soft spot for companies with a rap sheet. Must be the draw of the "bad boy" image.
Builder
 
  -3  
Sun 1 Jan, 2023 08:03 pm
@Glennn,
Quote:
Some people have a soft spot for companies with a rap sheet


Mostly it's just pig ignorance. Pfizzer's charge sheet is longer than your forearm. Problem being, the fines they pay are a fraction of their profits, and nobody goes to prison, so why would they stop lying, defrauding, bribing, and apparently even having detractors bumped off?

They used their historically massive profits from their useless mRNA injections, to purchase other pharmaceutical corporations, so I guess we'll just have more of the same BS to deal with for a longer time frame.
0 Replies
 
Builder
 
  -4  
Mon 2 Jan, 2023 04:19 am
@jcboy,
Quote:
It’s not clear yet where this version of omicron came from, but it appears to be spreading quickly here


Here's a clue; they're injecting it into you.
Glennn
 
  -4  
Mon 2 Jan, 2023 09:10 am
@Builder,
Yup. It's a pay-to-play arrangement between professional crooks and . . . other professional crooks. No one goes to jail or loses their job. If any one of us tries to claim the same right to not be locked up for commiting the exact same crime, we'd be in jail that night, and for a long, long time. That should be enough information for even the most diehard medical establishment fans on these forums to withdraw their trust in such companies.

But no!

Instead, they wait with bated breath for the next set of instructions from both offending parties in this pay-to-play game of theirs. You can even show them videos of their trusted "servants" tearing their masks off the second they believe the camera isn't rolling, but for some reason that is actually all too clear, they refuse to acknowledge or respond to the deception.

Cognitive dissonance on display, and they don't even know it!!
0 Replies
 
Glennn
 
  -1  
Mon 2 Jan, 2023 10:01 am
@Builder,
Ha ha, Builder. You've gotten thumbed down four times in your last post while I've yet to receive one.

Could it be they've finally figured out that liars can't be trusted? We'll see who comes along to defend them.
joe 2nation
 
  1  
Mon 2 Jan, 2023 10:07 am
@Glennn,
The thumb down/up thing isn't working.
jcboy
 
  3  
Mon 2 Jan, 2023 10:10 am
@joe 2nation,
I always felt they should do away with the thump feature on comments, leave it for only threads so you don't see the ones you're not interested in.
 

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