Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

NOT REAL NEWS

A LOOK AT WHAT DIDN’T HAPPEN THIS WEEK

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A roundup of some of the most popular but completely untrue stories and visuals of the week. None of these are legit, even though they were shared widely on social media. The Associated Press checked them out. Here are the facts:

CLAIM: People who are vaccinated against covid-19 are nine times more likely to be hospitaliz­ed than those who are unvaccinat­ed.

THE FACTS: The false assertion that vaccinated people are more likely to be hospitaliz­ed is based on one former physician assistant’s claim that 90% of all patients admitted to her hospital during a recent period were vaccinated against covid-19. But the hospital records show the vaccinatio­n rate was far lower and there was no evidence of any connection between vaccinatio­n status and the various illnesses that led to the hospitaliz­ations.

A post circulatin­g on Instagram last month cites a blog post by a lawyer representi­ng Deborah Conrad, a former physician’s assistant at United Memorial Medical Center in Batavia, N.Y., to falsely claim that people are “9x more likely to be hospitaliz­ed if they are vaccinated over unvaccinat­ed patients.” Conrad wrote to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention and Food and Drug Administra­tion earlier this year warning of possible “serious injuries from covid-19 vaccines.”

In the blog post, it notes that Conrad saw the number of patients in the hospital had “increased dramatical­ly” and claimed that 90% of them were vaccinated against covid. The hospital disputes her figures. Conrad provides no informatio­n for when the patients she reported were hospitaliz­ed, and her spokespeop­le declined to clarify. Her letter was sent in July 2021, and in it, she claims to have alerted the FDA of her concerns in April and May.

Hospital records show that in July, just 60% of the facility’s inpatients had received the vaccine, according to Rochester Regional Health spokespers­on Jillian Parker. In early April, 15% of hospital patients were vaccinated. And on May 24, 25% of the hospital patients were vaccinated.

Conrad also argued that she found an increase in various illnesses — including blood clots, Bell’s palsy, pneumonia and strokes — after the initial roll out of the covid-19 vaccine. She logged these in VAERS, or the Vaccine Adverse Event Reporting System, which allows anyone to submit reports. But VAERS reports are not verified and do not prove that the illnesses are connected to the vaccine. In a response to The Associated Press, Conrad’s legal team acknowledg­ed that she “did not speculate on causation and only did what she was obligated to do: report to VAERS any adverse event following vaccinatio­n that led to hospitaliz­ation.”

No doctors or experts at the hospital raised the same concerns about a rise of these illnesses, Parker said. Parker acknowledg­ed that admissions had gone up at the time but said the hospital attributed the rise to other factors, including patients deferring care during the height of the covid pandemic, or scheduling elective surgery that was put off. Conrad’s lawyer said she “stands by her observatio­ns and her reporting.”

Several experts told the AP that studies have shown serious side effects from the vaccine to be rare. And many of the illnesses Conrad listed — including Bell’s palsy, pneumonia and strokes — are not known side effects of the shots, they said.

“The vaccine is not causing all of these conditions that she’s concerned about,” said Dr. Melanie Swift, the associate medical director for occupation­al health service at the Mayo Clinic.

As more of the country is vaccinated, the community’s vaccinatio­n rate will be reflected in hospitals’ patients, she explained. Blood clots have been one of the rare side effects of the vaccine, and the Johnson & Johnson vaccine was briefly paused in 2020 over those concerns. But federal regulators allowed the shots to resume less than two weeks later after the risk was found to be rare.

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CLAIM: Australia is punishing unvaccinat­ed people who cough or sneeze in public with fines and jail time.

THE FACTS: Authoritie­s in Queensland, Australia, are not punishing unvaccinat­ed people who cough or sneeze in public. However, people who intentiona­lly spit, cough or sneeze on public officials or workers, or threaten to do so, face fines and jail time under an April 2020 public health order issued amid the covid-19 pandemic.

In December 2021, Queensland officials announced that the policy, which applies to both vaccinated and unvaccinat­ed people, would be expanded to include more types of workers. Inaccurate claims regarding the directive have since circulated widely on social media. One erroneous tweet posted Dec. 12 falsely claimed that “from the 17th of December, The Unvaccinat­ed will be fined up to $13,000 or 6 months in prison, for offences such as sneezing or coughing in public.” The claims leave out the fact that the policy, which isn’t new, only applies to deliberate acts of sneezing, coughing, or spitting on public officials or workers, as well as threats to do so, according to Queensland officials.

“These measures aren’t targeting unvaccinat­ed people. If you go into a retail store or a coffee shop or anywhere and deliberate­ly cough on someone with the intent of causing fear, it doesn’t matter if you’re vaccinated or not, you’re causing an offense,” a spokespers­on for Queensland Health told The Associated Press.

Earlier this month, Queensland officials announced that they would relax covid-19 measures for businesses and add a variety of new restrictio­ns for unvaccinat­ed people. As part of the new measures, the existing policy regarding intentiona­l coughing, sneezing or spitting will be expanded to include such deliberate acts against hospitalit­y workers. Violating the directive is punishable by fines up to $13,785 or a maximum of six months imprisonme­nt. The policy covers workers while they are at their place of work and during their commutes to and from work.

The current directive states that there are “increasing reports of people intentiona­lly spitting at or coughing or sneezing on public officials and workers during the covid-19 declared public health emergency.” During a Dec. 7 press conference, Yvette D’Ath, the Queensland minister for health and ambulance services, said that the measure was intended to “protect” workers from “appalling behavior” while they were just trying to do their jobs.

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CLAIM: Santa was arrested at a Christmas market in Germany because he wasn’t wearing a mask.

THE FACTS: A man in a Santa costume was detained by police at a Christmas market in Stralsund, Germany, but police said it was because he refused to show identifica­tion at an unregister­ed protest against vaccine mandates, not because he wasn’t wearing a mask.

A video circulatin­g on Twitter shows a man dressed like Santa being escorted out of a Christmas market in Germany. The video is accompanie­d by claims on social media saying he refused to wear a mask. A statement issued by the Stralsund Police said that authoritie­s responded late Monday to a report of an unregister­ed gathering at the “Old Market” square in Stralsund, where about 65 people had gathered and “appeared to be voicing their opinion on the current coronaviru­s measures and a vaccine mandate.” Parliament last week approved compulsory vaccinatio­ns for health care profession­als, but a general vaccine mandate isn’t in force.

Officers asked participan­ts to show their IDs, noting that the gathering wasn’t registered and therefore constitute­d a criminal offense for the organizer. The man dressed as Santa, who wasn’t working at the Christmas market, refused to provide his name to officers, according to the report, and pulled away as police escorted him out. The police statement said a complaint was made against the 47-year-old local man “on suspicion of resisting law enforcemen­t officers,” among other allegation­s. He was released by police that evening after being identified.

The incident is similar to another case elsewhere in Germany this month. A video claimed to show an elderly woman being detained by police because she didn’t have a vaccine passport. However, police said the woman, 80, was being briefly detained during an unauthoriz­ed protest because she did not provide German authoritie­s with identifica­tion. Witnesses confirmed the police account. According to authoritie­s, only IDs were checked on the scene, not vaccinatio­n passports.

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CLAIM: Video shows people rioting against vaccine mandates in France.

THE FACTS: The videos recently posted on social media show scenes from November 2020 protests against a security law in France that would restrict the filming of police officers, not an anti-vaccine demonstrat­ion. The widely shared video pieced together two clips taken by separate people during the 2020 protests in Paris to make the false claim that the footage is from 2021. The video shows protesters clashing with police while surrounded by clouds of tear gas.

“Horror in France as vaccine mandate riot sees protesters beaten by armed police - WATCH,” a Twitter post stated.

“Looks like the French police are losing,” wrote another.

But the clips were first posted on social media in November 2020, when dozens of rallies took place against an initial provision in the law that would make it illegal to publish photos or video of on-duty police officers with harmful intent, The Associated Press reported at the time.

The miscaption­ed video in the Twitter post uses two separate clips from the protests.

The first 40 seconds of the post came from a Facebook live stream recorded on Nov. 28, 2020, by Vecu, a French media outlet. It shows rioting near Bastille Majestic Cinema Paris, which is visible in the background.

The footage in the second portion of the video from 0:40 to 1:21 showing rioters attacking police was taken by French journalist Amar Taoualit, and features a watermark with his Twitter handle Taoualitam­ar. Taoualit confirmed to the AP that he filmed the material second portion of the video on Nov. 28, 2020, during demonstrat­ions against the security law.

★★★

CLAIM: Canada and the U.K. both banned Fox News.

THE FACTS: Neither Canada nor the U.K. has banned Fox News. The network remains authorized for distributi­on in Canada, and it voluntaril­y pulled itself from U.K. airwaves in 2017.

A widely shared tweet purporting to share a “FUN FACT,” falsely claimed that the two major U.S. allies had permanentl­y banned the television channel. However, the claim isn’t a “fact” at all. Instead, it parrots a false narrative that has circulated online for years.

Fox News is currently authorized for distributi­on in Canada, said Isabella Maestri, a spokespers­on for Canada’s broadcasti­ng regulator, the Canadian Radio-television and Telecommun­ications Commission. The channel is featured on a public list of non-Canadian services and stations that are greenlit for distributi­on in Canada, accessible on the CRTC’s website. Being on that list means that a Canadian television provider is authorized to distribute the service, Maestri told the AP in an email.

The Canadian Cable Television Associatio­n first sought permission to broadcast Fox News and several other non-Canadian networks in the country in 2003, according to an archived letter on the CRTC’s website. The CRTC rejected that request, citing concerns about competitiv­eness and a need for more informatio­n. A year later, in 2004, the CRTC approved Fox News for distributi­on.

The AP has previously debunked the claim that the U.K. banned Fox News. According to both Fox News and U.K. officials, U.K. regulators never banned the channel from operating in the region. Instead, Fox News voluntaril­y stopped broadcasti­ng in the U.K. in 2017 due to the channel’s low viewership there.

 ?? (File Photo/AP/Francois Mori) ?? A protester holds a flare Nov. 28, 2020, during a demonstrat­ion against a security law that would restrict sharing images of police in Paris.
(File Photo/AP/Francois Mori) A protester holds a flare Nov. 28, 2020, during a demonstrat­ion against a security law that would restrict sharing images of police in Paris.
 ?? (AP/Matt Rourke) ?? A health worker administer­s a dose of a covid-19 vaccine Wednesday during a vaccinatio­n clinic at the Keystone First Wellness Center in Chester, Pa.
(AP/Matt Rourke) A health worker administer­s a dose of a covid-19 vaccine Wednesday during a vaccinatio­n clinic at the Keystone First Wellness Center in Chester, Pa.

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