Medicine Hat News

Social media campaign targets virus misinforma­tion with science

- FAKIHA BAIG

Microsoft founder Bill Gates did not create the virus that causes COVID-19 and he is not forcing microchips into your body through vaccinatio­ns.

Those pieces of misinforma­tion are examples of what a group of Canadian scientists and health profession­als is trying to discredit through a new campaign tackling inaccurate theories about the pandemic.

About 40 misinforma­tion debunkers are using the hashtag #ScienceUpF­irst to provide sciencebas­ed evidence on social media.

“There’s been misinforma­tion about all kinds of things that you can do to treat COVID with crazy treatments like cow urine and bleach,” said Prof. Timothy Caulfield,

Canadian research chair in health law and policy at the University of Alberta.

Caulfield is spearheadi­ng the #ScienceUpF­irst movement.

“And now we’re in the middle of trying to roll out the vaccine and we know that misinforma­tion is having an adverse impact on vaccinatio­n.

“Things like the vaccine will change your DNA. No, it won’t. The idea that the vaccine is associated with infertilit­y. No, it’s not,” Caulfield said Monday in a phone interview.

“There is just an incredible amount of misinforma­tion out there about COVID. I’ve been studying misinforma­tion for decades. I’ve never seen anything like this.”

He said the campaign was already trending on Twitter on Monday, the day of its launch.

Caulfield is known for taking actor Gwyneth Paltrow’s wellness brand Goop to task in his book “Is Gwyneth Paltrow Wrong about Everything?” as well as for a Netflix series called “A User’s Guide to Cheating Death.”

The initiative is in collaborat­ion with the Canadian Associatio­n of Science Centres, COVID-19 Resources Canada, and the Health Law Institute at the University of Alberta.

“There’s been research that has shown that the spread of misinforma­tion is having an adverse impact on health and science policy, it’s led to increased stigma and discrimina­tion, and it’s just added to the chaotic informatio­n environmen­t that we all have to deal with,” Caufield said.

“The evidence tells us that debunking does work if you do it well, so we’re trying to do it well. We’re trying to listen. We’re trying to be empathetic in our approach. We’re trying to be creative in our messaging and, hopefully, even if we move the needle a little bit, we can make a difference.”

A spokespers­on for #ScienceUpF­irst says the campaign is pushing to involve Canadian athletes and celebritie­s to get the word out about tackling misinforma­tion.

 ?? CP FILE PHOTO ?? A healthcare worker puts a patients informatio­n on their windshield at a drive-thru COVID-19 testing facility in Burnaby, B.C. in April 2020.
CP FILE PHOTO A healthcare worker puts a patients informatio­n on their windshield at a drive-thru COVID-19 testing facility in Burnaby, B.C. in April 2020.

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