Arab Times

Seeking data, people struggle with ‘trust’

Science and experts

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WASHINGTON, May 7, (AP): When John Manley tested positive for COVID-19, his sister urged him to get on the malaria drug that she’d heard Fox News hosts plugging and that President Donald Trump was heralding as a potential “game changer” for fighting the coronaviru­s.

But Manley, 58, a civilian US Army public affairs officer, was skeptical of using a drug not approved by the Food and Drug Administra­tion for treating the virus and decided it was a gamble not worth taking.

“It caused a huge rift in the family because the science wasn’t behind it,” said Manley, who lives in Stuttgart, Germany, and whose wife, Heidi Mathis, also tested positive for the virus after a visit to New York. Both have since recovered, and the FDA has advised people not to take the drug outside a hospital or clinical trial.

The Manley family squabble highlights an essential question that many Americans are grappling with as they seek out the informatio­n they need to stay safe during the country’s worst public health crisis in a century: Whom do you trust?

Or, as Manley frames it: “What is being jammed down our throats in our news? Who is talking about these things? Where do you go to actually get something you can believe?” Sixty-eight percent of Americans say they highly trust the informatio­n that the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention is providing about the virus, 66% trust their doctor or health care provider, and 52% said the same about their state or local government, according to a recent Associated Press-NORC Center for Public Affairs Research poll.

But Americans are more skeptical of the coronaviru­s informatio­n they’re getting from the media and from family and friends, with 32% saying they have a lot of trust in informatio­n provided by each. Only 23% of Americans said they have a great deal or quite a bit of trust in the informatio­n that Trump provides on the coronaviru­s, according to the poll.

Credibilit­y

In interviews, Americans said the process of consuming, digesting and discerning the credibilit­y of the fire hose of virus informatio­n coming from politician­s, public health experts and the media - not to mention what their family, friends and colleagues are sharing on social media - has become a time-consuming and frequently unsettling process.

Gary Thomas, 71, a retiree from Pueblo, Colorado, and longtime news junkie, has become even more regimented in his consumptio­n. He begins each day at the breakfast table, where he’ll spend a couple of solitary hours with his phone and coffee reading the latest virus news. He’ll later put in several more hours watching the latest developmen­ts on cable with his wife, while continuing to monitor newspaper apps and social media feeds.

Contrast that with Michele Cody, 45, a technology manager from Riverton, New Jersey. She’s become so worn down by the crush of informatio­n that she’s put herself on a news diet - giving up her early morning newscast and relying more on a roundup of coronaviru­s news pushed to her inbox.

Retiree Jana Foley decided the best way to get the informatio­n she needs out of Trump’s briefings, and keep her blood from boiling, is through selective use of the mute button on her TV remote.

“When Trump is talking, we usually turn it down because we just get really upset and aggravated,” said Foley, 71, of Johnston, Iowa. “We turn it up when the experts are speaking.”

Vance Davis, 53, of Atlanta, finds himself frustrated with media coverage that he thinks is tinged with antiTrump bias. In recent weeks, he said he’s stopped watching CNN and is now flipping between Fox News, the conservati­ve One America News Network and Al Jazeera, the Qatar-headquarte­red network’s English newscast.

Davis said that much of the media has unfairly piled on Trump, overplayin­g things like the president’s musings that injecting disinfecta­nt could be a cure for the virus. He said Trump could have handled the situation better by saying he misspoke instead of claiming he was being sarcastic. Still, Davis said, he trusts the president “quite a bit.” “Sometimes, he may grandstand too much, but you have to understand who he is and just suck it up,” he said.

Zach Stafford, 24, an AmeriCorps educator from Belleville, Illinois, watched the crisis unfold overseas and began to worry about the personal ramificati­ons if it made it to the US: His mother, Debra Mize, 61, has multiple sclerosis, an autoimmune disease that makes her more vulnerable if she catches the virus. He immediatel­y realized that trustworth­y informatio­n on the virus was crucial for preserving his mother’s well-being.

Updates

The two have since been glued to the news, watching Trump’s briefings and New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo’s morning updates, as well as Illinois Gov. J.B. Pritzker’s news conference­s.

Mize said on most mornings she’ll wake up around 4 a.m., make her way to her recliner and begin scrolling through social media, news sites and Boston College historian Heather Cox Richardson’s daily newsletter. By day’s end - typically with liberal commentato­r Rachel Maddow’s MSNBC broadcast - Mize calculates she’s consumed about six hours of news.

She’s found herself flustered arguing with friends on social media who are convinced that the virus - and the need for social distancing - is a hoax. One was insistent that 5G towers, the ones that create speedy internet connection­s, were to blame for the pandemic. There is no evidence of this.

“When she started using it to justify the fact that she wasn’t going to listen to the stay-at-home orders ... I just unfriended her,” Mize said.

In rural Clay County, Nebraska, Tim Lewis, an emergency manager for the county, said winning trust and persuading people to follow the state’s social distancing guidelines is a battle that sometimes needs to be waged one person at a time.

On a recent afternoon, Lewis was preparing to reach out to one of the county’s 6,200 residents who unnerved neighbors by telling them he had close contact with coronaviru­s-infected patients elsewhere in the state but saw no need to self-quarantine.

“This isn’t New York,” said Lewis, whose county has had nine people test positive for the virus. “But we’re trying to get people’s trust and help them understand this is a world thing.”

Both state and local government officials are getting high marks from Americans, with 63% of respondent­s approving of their handling of the crisis, according to the latest AP-NORC poll. In comparison, only 40% said they approved of the federal government’s handling of the crisis, and 28% approved of congressio­nal leaders’ performanc­e.

Fully 60% of respondent­s said Trump was not listening to health experts enough, while 35% said he was listening to them just the right amount.

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