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: A video makes numerous claims about preventing the coronaviru­s, stating hydroxychl­oroquine can prevent and cure COVID-19, and wearing masks and keeping people locked down have no value.

THE FACTS: The video, which features a group that calls itself America’s Frontline Doctors, tells viewers they have been duped into isolating themselves and encourages people in the U.S. to return to their normal activities. It relies on unsubstant­iated and false informatio­n to make the case. The video was viewed millions of times and was retweeted by President Donald Trump.

Multiple social media platforms removed the video because it contained false informatio­n. Many of the key false claims in the video were made by Dr. Stella Immanuel, a Houston physician, who said she has successful­ly treated 350 patients using the anti-malarial drug hydroxychl­oroquine. She recommends using the drug alone as a preventive, and with zinc and azithromyc­in as a cure for COVID-19. “I came here to Washington, D.C., to tell America nobody needs to get sick,” she said in the video. “This virus has a cure. It is called hydroxychl­oroquine, zinc and Zithromax. I know you people want to talk about a mask. Hello? You don’t need mask. There is a cure. I know they don’t want to open schools. No, you don’t need people to be locked down. There is prevention and there is a cure.”

Claims that hydroxychl­oroquine is effective in treating the coronaviru­s have been widely debunked by top health officials and the drug has been a part of several national studies. “There is no evidence done in a rigorous study that shows hydroxychl­oroquine in combinatio­n with azithromyc­in or zinc or whatever combinatio­n you use that has any benefit in the treatment of coronaviru­s to date,” said Dr. Amesh Adalja, a senior scholar who specialize­s in infectious diseases at the Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health.

In June, the U.S Food and Drug Administra­tion revoked its emergency use authorizat­ion for the use of hydroxychl­oroquine and chloroquin­e, a similar drug, to treat COVID-19, basing its decision on large and randomized clinical trials of hospitaliz­ed patients. The FDA said the drugs “showed no benefit for decreasing the likelihood of death or speeding recovery.” The NIH recently conducted its own study of hydroxychl­oroquine on the coronaviru­s and found it offered no benefit to patients. The AP reported on a nationwide study released in April that looked at 368 patients and how they responded to hydroxychl­oroquine with or without the antibiotic azithromyc­in, also known as Zithromax. The analysis of the use of the drugs in U.S. veterans’ hospitals revealed there were more deaths among those who were given the malaria drug versus standard care.

While there has been evidence that hydroxychl­oroquine has an effect against the coronaviru­s in a laboratory setting, it does not appear to have any kind of beneficial effect in humans, said Adalja of Johns Hopkins. The World Health Organizati­on has said there is currently no cure for the virus, which has killed more than 150,000 people in the U.S. and 675,000 around the world. The video not only touted hydroxychl­oroquine but it also attacked recommenda­tions made by top health officials to combat the virus.

In the video, Immanuel says Americans don’t need a mask because hydroxychl­oroquine is the cure. Experts have said time and time again that wearing a mask helps reduce the spread of the coronaviru­s along with keeping 6 feet apart.

CLAIM: Infrared thermomete­rs, which are held near the forehead to scan body temperatur­e without direct contact, point an infrared light directly at the brain’s pineal gland, exposing it to harmful radiation.

THE FACTS: Infrared thermomete­rs don’t emit radiation into the brain; they sense heat emitted by the body. They pose no risk to the pineal gland, which is located deep within the brain, according to Dr. Haris Sair, director of neuroradio­logy at Johns Hopkins University.

Non-contact infrared thermomete­rs held up to a person’s forehead have become popular during the COVID-19 pandemic as businesses and government­s seek ways to detect possible infection without risk of transmissi­on. Social media posts circulatin­g widely on Facebook this week falsely suggested the thermomete­rs are aimed at the same “exact point” as the pineal gland and could be exposing it to some sort of harmful radiation or infrared light. “WHY ARE THEY AIMING A LASER RAY AT OUR PINEAL GLAND FOR A VIRUS THAT HAS A 99.9% SURVIVAL RATE?” read the text on one viral image, which was shared in several posts collective­ly viewed more than 100,000 times.

Some social media users also speculated on why the thermomete­rs were allegedly targeting the pineal gland — a tiny gland that produces melatonin, among other hormones, and has colloquial­ly been called the

“third eye.” According to Sair, these posts are false on two counts: the notion the thermomete­rs target the pineal gland, and the notion they emit radiation. Infrared thermomete­rs are meant to pick up the natural infrared wavelength­s your body emits, Sair said. They don’t send infrared light or wavelength­s into the body. “It’s not sending any kind of signal,” he said. Tim Robinson, vice president of marketing at the Utah-based temperatur­e instrument retailer ThermoWork­s, said it’s a “common misconcept­ion” that non-contact infrared thermomete­rs are transmitti­ng waves into the body. “There’s that sensation that you’re somehow sending something that’s going to bounce back, but none of that is true,” he said. “It’s just a catcher. It’s catching light waves.”

CLAIM: If your coronaviru­s test comes back positive, it “could also be the common cold.” “This is straight from the CDC.”

THE FACTS: Posts sharing this claim are mistaking guidance on antibody tests from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention for the health agency’s guidance on tests for the virus. A common cold alone would not result in a positive COVID-19 test.

There are two types of tests available that relate to COVID-19: viral tests and antibody tests. Viral tests check if the virus that causes COVID-19 is active in the body, while antibody tests are designed to look for a past infection by checking the blood for relevant antibodies. As part of its guidance on antibody tests, the CDC’s website says: “A positive test result shows you may have antibodies from an infection with the virus that causes COVID-19. However, there is a chance a positive result means that you have antibodies from an infection with a virus from the same family of viruses (called coronaviru­ses), such as the one that causes the common cold.”

In recent weeks, social media users have confused this message on antibody tests as pertaining to viral tests. “So if your Corona test is positive it could also be the common cold,” reads one Facebook post viewed more than 160,000 times. “This is straight from the CDC. I rest my case.” This post misreprese­nts CDC informatio­n, and is false. If your viral test is positive, it means you have a current infection with SARS-CoV-2, the specific virus that causes COVID-19, according to the CDC.

CLAIM: Photo shows a federal police officer in a futuristic-looking helmet and body armor, reminiscen­t of a “stormtroop­er” in the “Star Wars” franchise, during a recent deployment in Portland, Oregon.

THE FACTS: While federal police officers have appeared in Portland in recent weeks dressed in camouflage and tactical gear, this image is not real — it’s an artist’s rendering of an imagined police vest. On July 27, social media posts circulatin­g on Facebook and Twitter claimed to show a photo of a federal “stormtroop­er” decked out in gray armor that covered his head, face, neck and upper body. “A Federal Stormtroop­er deployed in Portland to deal with peaceful protesters,” read one Facebook post viewed more than 20,000 times. “This is America.”

A Facebook page promoting Medicare for All shared the photo too, lamenting the apparent excess armor during a pandemic that has left some medical personnel without adequate personal protective equipment. “Remember when doctors, nurses, and hospital staff didn’t have masks or tests??” the post read. “…but Trump’s stormtroop­ers are decked out in tens of thousands of dollars worth of hi-tech equipment like they’re going to war in outer Space.”

It’s true that federal agents responding to protests against police brutality in Portland, Seattle and other cities have worn military fatigues, masks and helmets, often covering most of their bodies. However, this particular image sparking concerns on social media this week does not show a real federal officer. Instead, it’s an artist’s digital illustrati­on of a futuristic police vest. The image appears on a portfolio website for Michael Andrew Nash, an Australia-based digital artist who posted the illustrati­on on a digital blog as early as August 2016. “Yes, I created the work,” Nash told the AP in an email. “Nothing political behind it.”

CLAIM: Video shows Hurricane Hanna knocking down Trump’s border wall.

THE FACTS: The video does show heavy winds knocking down a section of border wall being built under the Trump administra­tion, but it was not taken as Hurricane Hanna passed over Texas this weekend. It was taken in June and shows heavy winds knocking down sections of border wall in New Mexico. “U.S. Customs and Border Protection is not aware of any border wall panels falling over due to Hurricane Hanna hitting the Rio Grande Valley Sector this past weekend,” reads a statement emailed to the AP by agency spokespers­on Roderick Kise. “The video circulatin­g on social media appears to be from June 2020 when high winds caused several border wall panels that were pending additional anchoring to fall over at a constructi­on site near Deming, New Mexico.”

The U.S. Army Corps of Engineers is overseeing the ongoing wall constructi­on south of Deming, including the section of wall featured in the video. Raini Brunson, a Corps spokespers­on, confirmed the details about the video, but had no informatio­n about who filmed the footage.

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