Times Colonist

Some doctors sneak education into online content to drown out myths

- NICOLE THOMPSON

When Dr. Siobhan Deshauer makes online videos, her primary goal is to demystify medicine. Her secondary goal?

“I call it ‘smuggling in education,’ ” said the physician and YouTuber, who has nearly a million subscriber­s on the platform. “You’re coming for this mystery and this excitement, but I’m smuggling in some topics that I think are really important and that I’m passionate about.”

Experts say one of the best ways to fight a rising tide of medical misinforma­tion on social media is to drown it out with captivatin­g content backed by science, and Deshauer, an Ontario-based internal medicine and rheumatolo­gy specialist, is among a growing cohort of doctors doing just that.

Take one of her medical mystery videos, for example. In it, Deshauer tells the story of a woman who had lead poisoning. Doctors took ages to figure out what was causing her symptoms, but ultimately realized they were a result of lead in the Ayurvedic supplement­s she was taking.

It’s a compelling video with a title designed to draw you in: “Deadly illness from THIS SUPPLEMENT: Medical Mystery.” The video’s thumbnail image shows Deshauer looking shocked in front of a bright blue background. Behind her, big block letters spell out “POISONED” and an arrow points to an X-ray image of someone’s lower leg.

Those are the things that hook the viewer, but for Deshauer, much of the value in the video comes from that “smuggled-in” education.

“I brought in the concept of how are supplement­s regulated and what should you look for when you’re buying a supplement? How do you keep yourself safe? That wasn’t the topic, that wasn’t the title of the video, but someone would walk away learning those things.”

Deshauer, who goes by the username ViolinMD online in a nod to her pre-medicine career as a violinist, said she got her start making videos when she was in school to document all she was learning.

“And with the community [of viewers] building, I got to hear their comments, their concerns, what they had seen in health care, perhaps some of their fears,” she said. “And I got the sense that a lot of fears around health care came from not being able to access it or see what happens behind closed doors.”

The algorithms that feed compelling content to users can bolster those fears, experts said. They tend to boost sensationa­lized misinforma­tion and generaliza­tions, turning social media sites into a harmful echo chamber for some users, said Timothy Caulfield, a health policy and law professor at the University of Alberta, who has in recent years become one of Canada’s loudest voices on the topic.

“It’s going to be a neverendin­g battle,” he said. “There’s never going to be one simple tool that’s going to fix this incredibly complex cultural, social, economic and technologi­cal challenge — but we are getting more and more good research that tells us what kinds of approaches work best.”

Caulfield said the most effective science communicat­ors use some of the same tactics as those spreading misinforma­tion — but back it up with accurate data instead of pseudoscie­nce.

There are a number of people doing this well, he said. Dr. Jen Gunter, a gynecologi­st, has been at it for a while, first taking aim at misinforma­tion published by Gwyneth Paltrow’s wellness website Goop, and Dr. Samir

Gupta is on Instagram and TikTok debunking wellness fads and misinforma­tion.

Caulfield said some doctors don’t think very much about how they present their content, but those who gain an audience are more mindful of that.

“Think about what your content’s going to look like,” he said. “Often the clinical community, the scientific community doesn’t do that, and the people pushing misinforma­tion do.”

One of those techniques, he said, is through easily shareable infographi­cs and art.

Caulfield is on the executive advisory committee for Science Up First, an initiative that aims to debunk health misinforma­tion. They encourage independen­t experts to create science-backed content and the organizati­on also creates some of its own.

Jonathan Jarry, a science communicat­or with McGill University’s Office for Science and Society, said another tactic involves using anecdotes.

“Share your own personal experience­s if you can, because stories resonate more than tables and graphs,” he said, addressing scientists and doctors.

But those personal experience­s need to be backed up by a body of evidence, he said.

It’s also best to show people the evidence, rather than simply telling them how they should feel, Jarry said.

“People don’t want to be to be told what to think. They don’t want you to be paternalis­tic. They want you to show them your work. Show them your research. Show them how you arrived at your conclusion,” he said. “Transparen­cy engenders trust.”

Dr. Kathleen Ross, president of the Canadian Medical Associatio­n, said her organizati­on has done polls that show doctors are a trusted source of health informatio­n.

“Unfortunat­ely at this moment in Canada, many Canadians — almost seven million — don’t have access to that longitudin­al primary care source to go and have these discussion­s with. So misinforma­tion and uptake of misinforma­tion is a tremendous risk and leading to bad outcomes,” she said.

 ?? GIORDANO CIAMPINI, CP ?? Dr. Siobhan Deshauer, an Ontario-based internal medicine and rheumatolo­gy specialist, is among a growing cohort of doctors and researcher­s starting to drown out misinforma­tion using their own online content. Deshauer’s channel on YouTube is shown in a photo illustrati­on.
GIORDANO CIAMPINI, CP Dr. Siobhan Deshauer, an Ontario-based internal medicine and rheumatolo­gy specialist, is among a growing cohort of doctors and researcher­s starting to drown out misinforma­tion using their own online content. Deshauer’s channel on YouTube is shown in a photo illustrati­on.

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