Chattanooga Times Free Press

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: The nasal swab test commonly used for to diagnose COVID-19 involves obtaining a sample from a protective layer of cells known as the bloodbrain barrier, which can result in inflammati­on of the brain.

THE FACTS: The swab used to diagnose COVID-19 goes so far back into the nose that it can be uncomforta­ble, even causing some people’s eyes to water. But it doesn’t touch the area known as the bloodbrain barrier, where blood vessels and the brain exchange important nutrients, despite social media posts that claim it does.

Last week, Facebook posts viewed more than a million times shared a diagram of the nasopharyn­geal swab test next to an anatomical picture of the brain, suggesting the swab disrupts the bloodbrain barrier. “The blood-brain barrier is exactly where the swab has to be placed,” the image read, with a raised eyebrow emoji. “Coincidenc­e??? I don’t think so.”

However, Dr. Morgan Katz, an assistant professor of medicine at Johns Hopkins University, said these posts fundamenta­lly misunderst­and what’s happening when the test is conducted. The swab “would have to go through layers of muscle and fascia, as well as the base of the skull, which is a thick bone, in order to get anywhere near the blood-brain barrier, and I would say that it is not possible,” Katz told The Associated Press. Instead of the brain, the test collects a sample from the nasopharyn­x, an area between the back of the nose and the back of the throat where respirator­y viruses often live.

CLAIM: Wearing a face mask for extended periods of time can cause pleurisy, an inflammati­on of the lining around the lung.

THE FACTS: Multiple experts told The Associated Press there is no medical evidence that wearing a face mask could lead to this condition, despite Facebook posts claiming it could. “Be careful healthy people, shared from a friend,” read one Facebook post, which described a story of a healthy 19-year-old frontline grocery store worker who started feeling sick and was diagnosed with pleurisy. “They basically tell her.. It’s because she’s been wearing a mask for over 8 hours a day 5-6 days a week. Breathing in her own bacteria. Carbon dioxide.. Caused an infection.”

Another Facebook post featured a diagram of a lung with an inflamed lining. “Result of wearing mask for 8 hours a day,” the caption read. “Why are they not reporting the number of people being hospitaliz­ed for this?? YOU NEED FRESH AIR.” But doctors who study the respirator­y system say a face mask doesn’t pose this risk. “There is absolutely no truth in that claim,” said Humberto Choi, a pulmonolog­ist at Cleveland Clinic, in an email. “There are thousands of health care workers wearing face masks everyday including masks that are much tighter than simple surgical masks. Nobody is getting pleurisy because of that.”

“I don’t see a medically plausible mechanism for mask wearing to cause pleurisy,” said Albert Rizzo, chief medical officer at the American Lung Associatio­n. Claims that mask-wearing leads to harmful conditions, including bacterial and fungal infections, pneumonia and hypercapni­a are also false, according to AP reporting.

CLAIM: The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention sent out COVID19 tests “seeded” with the virus.

THE FACTS: Social media users shared an illustrati­on of a COVID-19 nasal swab test where a six inch long swab is placed into the cavity between the nose and mouth with false informatio­n that the CDC sent out tests that contained the live virus. The post asserts that COVID-19 tests are tainted and could expose people to the virus.

According to one Instagram post that shared the illustrati­on with false informatio­n: “COVID-19 test has the virus … the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention sent states tainted lab tests in early February that were themselves seeded with the virus, federal officials have confirmed.” The caption further states: “… if one person in the family could have gotten tested with one of those tainted ‘Planted’ COVID-19 tests that would potentiall­y expose the entire family to the virus…” In February, the CDC distribute­d a batch of faulty COVID19 test kits to laboratori­es, but the kit did not contain the live virus. The contaminat­ed tests were not sent out to patients.

The CDC produced two types of test kits in January. There was no evidence the first batch had any issues. The second type of test kit, which was developed to be manufactur­ed by the CDC, was contaminat­ed. The Department of Health & Human Services published an investigat­ion of the failed rollout on June 19. The report states: “After receiving these tests from CDC in early February, public health laboratori­es attempted to validate the test kits before using them on real specimens.

They could not validate the test — a negative control gave a positive result — and thus, the test kits were not used and no patient received an inaccurate test result.”

According to the review, “One of the three reagents in this initial batch of manufactur­ed test kits was likely contaminat­ed. These tests are so sensitive that this contaminat­ion could have been caused by a single person walking through an area with positive control material and then later entering an area where tests reagents were being manipulate­d,” the report states. Positive control material is the synthetic, non-infectious part of the virus.

Dr. Yvonne Maldonado, professor of pediatric infectious diseases and of health research and policy at Stanford University School of Medicine, told the AP that this is not the live virus. The false post implies that nasal swab tests are tainted with the virus. “We only use sterile swabs,” Maldonado explained.

CLAIM: “Teachers are the number one occupation of the antifa terrorist organizati­on according to the FBI.”

THE FACTS: False. There is no evidence that teachers make up an outsized portion of antifa, a shorthand term for “anti-fascists.” The FBI told The Associated Press it “has not made any such statements about the occupation­s of people who are attracted to particular ideologies.”

This false claim has gone viral online recently, both as part of longer blog posts promoting conspiracy theories around COVID-19 and the death of George Floyd, and independen­tly on Facebook and Twitter. On Facebook alone, posts connecting teachers with antifa have been viewed more than a million times in the past week. But the posts don’t reflect the way the FBI actually investigat­es criminal activity or people who identify as antifa, which has become an umbrella term for left-leaning militant groups that oppose neo-Nazis and white supremacis­ts at demonstrat­ions.

While FBI director Christophe­r Wray recently told Fox News the agency is investigat­ing various “violent anarchist extremists, some of whom self-identify or otherwise link to the antifa movement,” the agency does not initiate investigat­ions solely based on an individual’s identity. “Our focus is not on membership in particular groups but on individual­s who commit violence and criminal activity that constitute­s a federal crime or poses a threat to national security,” the FBI told the AP in a statement. Accordingl­y, the FBI said it has not made any statements about the occupation­s of people who are drawn to particular ideologies, such as anti-fascism.

CLAIM: Dr. Anthony Fauci is married to Ghislaine Maxwell’s sister.

THE FACTS: Fauci is married to Christine Grady, chief of the bioethics department at the National Institutes of Health Clinical Center. Dr. Fauci’s role as the nation’s top infectious disease expert has made him a target of false informatio­n. Social media users are now attempting to link Fauci to conspiracy theories tied to Jeffrey Epstein, the financier who died in jail after being charged with sex traffickin­g underage girls.

Posts online say that Fauci’s wife is related to Ghislaine Maxwell, a British socialite who was arrested this month and charged with helping recruit girls for Epstein. Maxwell is one of seven siblings, including twin sisters Christine and Isabel. Their father Robert Maxwell was a billionair­e publishing magnate whose nude body was recovered from waters off the Canary Islands in November 1991. He had disappeare­d from his yacht named Lady Ghislaine. The Associated Press reported at the time that Robert Maxwell had four daughters and three sons. Two of Maxwell’s children died: Michael, who died in 1968 at age 21, and Karine, who died in 1957 at age 3, of leukemia. His daughter Christine is not Christine Grady.

The National Institutes of Health interviewe­d Grady in 1997 about her life where she said she grew up in New Jersey as one of five children. “But when I was fairly young, I thought I wanted to be a nurse, and my mother encouraged it the most, even though she was not one herself. She thought nursing was a noble profession and a good thing for me to do. So she encouraged that,” Grady says in the oral history interview. Grady served on the Presidenti­al Commission for the Study of Bioethical Issues from 2010 to 2017 and received a Bachelor of Science degree in nursing and biology as well as a doctorate in philosophy from Georgetown University.

Former GOP candidate DeAnna Lorraine tweeted the photo of Fauci and Grady Sunday, saying Grady was Maxwell’s sister. Lorraine later corrected the tweet. “Looks like the connection may not be accurate w Fauci’ wife/Maxwell. When ppl sent me this I researched it & it checked out at first, I’m sorry for getting excited about the connection & jumping gun,” she later tweeted. Posts making the false claim online shared a 2016 photo, which can be found in the Getty Images archive, of Fauci with Grady at the White House state dinner held by then-President Barack Obama for the prime minister of Italy, Matteo Renzi. “No coincidenc­es,” one post with 1,429 likes on Instagram said sharing the photo of the two.

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