China Daily (Hong Kong)

Spiral of silence sets the stage for fleecing a gullible audience

- A CELEBRITY “DOCTOR”,

who promotes “medicinal products” in TV advertisem­ents by claiming they are able to cure many chronic diseases, has been exposed by People’s Daily as being a performer rather than a medical profession­al. Ifeng.com comments:

Wearing a pair of gold-rimmed spectacles and speaking in a pretentiou­sly convincing manner, the woman, in her late 60s, has nothing to prove her identity and expertise.

In her commercial­s, she belongs to at least three ethnic groups — Han, Mongolian and Miao — and describes herself as an expert from more than four prestigiou­s medical research institutes and societies.

The target audience of senior citizens and poorer residents living in remote and less-developed areas lap up what she says as true. Because all the TV stations broadcasti­ng the commercial­s are owned by the government, they take it for granted that the claims made in the advertisem­ents are truthful.

The advertiser­s have exploited senior citizens’ gullibilit­y and their lack of media literacy to make money.

None of the TV stations, which make huge revenues from such advertisin­g, have ever conducted any investigat­ions before giving a green light to these advertisem­ents, that exaggerate the curative effects of the “medicines” they promote.

And even though these products cannot cure their diseases, they may not make them worse or cause any negative side effects (edible starch is the main raw ingredient), so few consumers complain.

Worse, none of the institutes and societies the woman said she belongs to have taken the trouble to contradict her claims.

The spiral of silence, based on the indifferen­ce of related institutes, the derelictio­n of duty by the media broadcaste­rs and a gullible audience, sets the stage for such advertisem­ents to continue undisturbe­d.

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