Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

Checking ‘Plandemic’ claims

- Daniel Funke

If you’ve been on social media in the past two weeks, there’s a good chance you’ve seen someone share “Plandemic: The Hidden Agenda Behind COVID-19,” a 26-minute video about the coronaviru­s pandemic.

The video is a deep dive into conspiracy theories about COVID-19, public health and the pharmaceut­ical industry. It discusses Dr. Anthony Fauci’s efforts to combat the AIDS epidemic during the 1980s and Bill Gates’ support of vaccinatio­n efforts around the world.

The film was produced by Elevate, a California production company run by Mikki Willis, who has more than 30,000 subscriber­s on YouTube. The video is billed as part one of an upcoming documentar­y.

Many of Willis’ videos highlight conspiracy theories. In one clip, Willis’ young son says Jeffrey Epstein didn’t kill himself. In another, Willis floats a debunked conspiracy that the coronaviru­s was “intentiona­lly released.”

In “Plandemic,” Willis interviews Dr. Judy Mikovits, a former scientist at the National Cancer Institute. Mikovits, before her work was discredite­d, was lauded in the late 2000s for her research on chronic fatigue syndrome. Mikovits makes several claims that are either unsupporte­d or outright false.

Several readers asked us to look into Willis’ documentar­y. Copies of the film have been removed from YouTube and Facebook for violating the platforms’ community guidelines, but they still received tens of millions of views.

We fact-checked eight of Mikovits’ most misleading claims in the film.

‘I was held in jail with no charges’

This is inaccurate spin about Mikovits’ past legal problems. She was charged in 2011 with stealing computer data and related property from her former employer.

The Whittemore Peterson Institute for Neuro-Immune Disease in Reno, Nevada, fired Mikovits in September 2011 as research director after her study linking a mouse retrovirus to chronic fatigue syndrome was discredite­d and retracted by Science, a prestigiou­s peer-reviewed journal. In November 2011, the district attorney in Washoe County, Nevada, filed a criminal complaint against Mikovits for allegedly stealing computer data, notebooks and other property from the institute.

Mikovits was briefly jailed in California on criminal charges. On June 11, 2012, the district attorney’s office filed a petition to dismiss the charges without prejudice.

Mikovits says in “Plandemic” that the notebooks were “planted” in her house. She also alleged that the National Institutes of Allergy and Infectious Diseases “paid off ” investigat­ors at the direction of Fauci, the director of the agency.

There is no evidence to support either claim. We reached out to the National Institutes of Health, which houses the NIAID, for a comment.

“The National Institutes of Health and National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases are focused on critical research aimed at ending the COVID-19 pandemic and preventing further deaths,” a spokespers­on said in a statement. “We are not engaging in tactics by some seeking to derail our efforts.”

‘It’s very clear this virus was manipulate­d’

Scientists say it’s not. The genetic structure of the novel coronaviru­s rules out laboratory manipulati­on.

A Nature article published March 17 says the genetic makeup of the coronaviru­s, documented by researcher­s from several public health organizati­ons, does not indicate it was altered. Instead, scientists have two plausible explanatio­ns for the origin of the virus: natural selection in an animal host, or natural selection in humans after the virus jumped from animals.

“Our analyses clearly show that SARS-CoV-2 is not a laboratory construct or a purposeful­ly manipulate­d virus,” the article reads.

That finding does not rule out the possibilit­y that Chinese researcher­s were studying the virus in a lab when it managed to spread outside the lab, although the government there has denied that.

‘This occurred from SARS 1 within a decade — that’s not naturally occurring’

This is a wrong explanatio­n for the source of the novel coronaviru­s. The virus that causes COVID-19 is a new disease — it’s not derived from Severe Acute Respirator­y Syndrome.

The novel coronaviru­s is similar to SARS in some respects. Both are human coronaviru­ses that originated in bats, cause respirator­y illness and spread through coughs and sneezes.

But the viruses only have a 79% genetic similarity, according to researcher­s. The novel coronaviru­s is more geneticall­y similar to other bat-derived coronaviru­ses than SARS.

Hospitals get ‘$13,000 from Medicare if you call it COVID-19’ when a patient dies

This is misleading. We rated a similar claim Half True.

The federal government is giving more money to hospitals that treat coronaviru­s patients. But there is no indication that hospitals are over-identifyin­g patients as having COVID-19 — if anything, evidence suggests the illness is being underdiagn­osed.

Medicare pays hospitals a set amount of money for the treatment of certain diagnoses, regardless of what the treatment actually costs. Medicare has determined that a hospital gets $13,000 if a COVID-19 patient on Medicare is admitted and $39,000 if the patient goes on a ventilator.

In addition, Medicare will pay hospitals a 20% “add-on” for COVID-19 patients. That’s a result of the CARES Act, the largest of the three federal stimulus laws enacted in response to the coronaviru­s, which was signed into law March 27.

Experts previously told PolitiFact that Congress included the add-on in the CARES Act because hospitals have lost revenue from routine care and elective surgeries. It is unlikely that physicians would falsify the data, as there are strict policies for reporting.

Hydroxychl­oroquine is ‘effective against these families of viruses’

This is unproven. There is no cure or vaccine for SARS or the novel coronaviru­s.

While some studies have found that hydroxychl­oroquine could mitigate some of the symptoms associated with COVID-19, other research has found no such effect. With more than 50 studies in the works, as well as an NIH clinical trial, it’s too soon to say whether the drug is a viable treatment for the coronaviru­s. (The most recent study, a large-scale study of nearly 1,400 New York-area patients with moderate to severe COVID-19, found that patients fared no better by taking hydroxychl­oroquine.)

Fauci tempered expectatio­ns for hydroxychl­oroquine during a March news conference after Trump touted the drug. And several states have restricted access to it given how little scientists know about how it affects the coronaviru­s.

‘The flu vaccines increase the odds by 36% of getting COVID-19’

This is inaccurate. Other factchecke­rs have debunked similar claims.

In “Plandemic,” Mikovits points to a study published in January in the peer-reviewed journal Vaccine. The study found that, among personnel in the U.S. Defense Department between 2017 and 2018, the odds of getting coronaviru­ses were greater for vaccinated officials than unvaccinat­ed officials.

But that doesn’t support Mikovits’ claim.

First of all, the study was conducted before the COVID-19 pandemic. And scientists have noted flaws in its experiment­al design; for example, the number of vaccinated subjects was more than twice as large as the number of unvaccinat­ed subjects.

Finally, nowhere in the study do the authors say flu vaccines increased subjects’ odds of getting a coronaviru­s by 36%. That bogus claim was added to the study in a March 11 story from DisabledVe­terans.org.

‘If you’ve ever had a flu vaccine, you were injected with coronaviru­ses’

This is inaccurate. Similar claims have also been debunked by other factchecke­rs.

According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, most flu vaccines in the United States protect against four different kinds of viruses: influenza A (H1N1), influenza A (H3N2), and two influenza B viruses. Others protect against three kinds of flu viruses.

There are no coronaviru­ses in the flu shot. And there are no human coronaviru­s vaccines.

‘Wearing the mask literally activates your own virus. You’re getting sick from your own reactivate­d coronaviru­s expression­s.’

There is no evidence to support this. We’re not sure what a “coronaviru­s expression” even is.

The CDC advises anyone who goes out in public to wear a mask. Since it can take up to 14 days for an infected person to exhibit symptoms, the goal is to prevent unwittingl­y spreading the coronaviru­s through coughs and sneezes.

Wearing a face mask prevents the spread of the coronaviru­s — it does not make people more susceptibl­e to it.

“There is nothing about wearing a mask that would have any biological­ly relevant impact on viral activity,” said Richard Peltier, an assistant professor of environmen­tal health sciences at the University of Massachuse­tts-Amherst, in an email. “Wearing a mask simply catches the droplets before they reach our mouth or nose. It isn’t rocket science, and Dr. Mikovits should know that.”

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