Toronto Star

Two groups dominate anti-vax info

Study of Facebook ads connects misinforma­tion to ‘motivated interests’

- LENA H. SUN

The majority of Facebook advertisem­ents spreading misinforma­tion about vaccines were funded by two anti-vaccine groups, including one led by high-profile activist Robert F. Kennedy Jr., according to a study published this week.

The World Mercury Project headed by Kennedy and a California-based organizati­on called Stop Mandatory Vaccinatio­n bought 54 per cent of the anti-vaccine ads on Facebook, the study found.

Researcher­s said the results surprised them. Much of the anti-vaccine content posted on social media platforms such as Facebook and Twitter may appear to be organic, grassroots discussion­s led by neighbourh­ood groups and concerned parents, said David Broniatows­ki, an associate professor of engineerin­g management at George Washington University, and one of the authors of the new study.

“In fact,” said Broniatows­ki, who studies group decisionma­king, “what we are seeing is a small number of motivated interests that are trying to disseminat­e a lot of harmful content.” The small group of antivaccin­e ad buyers successful­ly used the ads to reach targeted audiences.

The study was conducted before Facebook changed its policies around anti-vaccine advertisin­g, but researcher­s said it provides a look at how the platform has been used to spread misinforma­tion. It also provides a baseline for researcher­s to evaluate how well Facebook’s new policies are working, said Amelia Jamison, a social science researcher at the University of Maryland and another study author.

The report in the journal Vaccine is the first to study antivaccin­e ads in Facebook’s advertisin­g archive. The platform, a publicly available and searchable repository, was introduced by Facebook in 2018 to improve transparen­cy related to certain forms of advertisin­g considered of “national importance.” The social media giant has repeatedly come under fire for allowing the promotion of anti-vaccine material.

In recent years, false claims on social media about vaccines have led growing numbers of parents to shun or delay getting their children vaccinated. Misinforma­tion and skepticism about the safety of the measlesmum­ps-rubella vaccine contribute­d significan­tly to the nearly yearlong measles outbreak in the United States that ended in October. The potentiall­y deadly disease surged to 1,261 cases this year, the highest number in nearly three decades. Anti-vaccine activists also spread misinforma­tion about vaccine-preventabl­e diseases, downplayin­g their danger.

This year, the Post reported on a wealthy Manhattan couple who have emerged as major financiers of the anti-vaccine movement. Hedge fund manager and philanthro­pist Bernard Selz and his wife, Lisa, have contribute­d more than $3 million (U.S.) in recent years to a handful of activists who have played an outsize role in the anti-vaccine movement.

Another major player in antivaccin­e publicity and support is attorney Kennedy, a nephew of president John F. Kennedy, who runs the Children’s Health Defense, which is closely aligned with the World Mercury Project.

The group’s overall message falsely claims that vaccines are contributi­ng to a vast array of childhood illnesses. In May, Kennedy was publicly criticized by his brother, sister and niece who said he has helped “spread dangerous misinforma­tion over social media and is complicit in sowing distrust of the science behind vaccines.”

The group Stop Mandatory Vaccinatio­n is headed by Larry Cook, who calls himself “an advocate for natural living.” On his website, Cook says he uses donations to pay for Facebook advertisin­g, among other expenses, including his personal bills. Many advertisem­ents his group funded featured stories of infants allegedly harmed by vaccines, researcher­s found.

Broniatows­ki and colleagues at the University of Maryland and Johns Hopkins University searched Facebook’s ad archive for vaccine-related ads during two time periods: December 2018 and February of this year.

Of 309 relevant advertisem­ents, 163 were pro vaccine and 145 were anti-vaccine. The messages promoting vaccinatio­n did not have a common or organized theme or funder. Despite a similar number of advertisem­ents, there were 83 different groups that promoted vaccinatio­ns, while five groups accounted for 75 per cent of anti-vaccine messages.

Many pro vaccine advertisem­ents were taken down by Facebook, researcher­s found, because first-time buyers failed to fill out required informatio­n disclosing their funding. That ends up inadverten­tly removing science-based informatio­n.

In March, after mounting public pressure, Facebook announced that it would reject ads that include “misinforma­tion about vaccines” as part of a wider crackdown against vaccine conspiracy theories on the platform and would block advertisem­ents that include false content about vaccines.

 ?? DESIREE RIOS THE NEW YORK TIMES FILE PHOTO ?? The World Mercury Project, headed by Robert F. Kennedy Jr., funded many of the anti-vaccine ads on Facebook, a study says.
DESIREE RIOS THE NEW YORK TIMES FILE PHOTO The World Mercury Project, headed by Robert F. Kennedy Jr., funded many of the anti-vaccine ads on Facebook, a study says.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada