Deutsche Welle (English edition)

COVID: Bangladesh vaccinatio­n drive marred by misinforma­tion

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The government is working to counter widely shared rumors and pseudoscie­nce about vaccines. However, falsehoods are spreading on social media faster than facts.

Bangladesh kicked off its coronaviru­s vaccinatio­n campaign on Wednesday, with up to 500 health workers lined up to receive a dose of AstraZenec­a's vaccine over the next two days. After this group is monitored, nationwide vaccinatio­ns are due to start on February 7.

As the government prepares vaccinatio­n centers around the country, rumors about the vaccine have begun to spread on social media, and health officials are concerned this will lead to large numbers of people refusing to take a shot.

Health communicat­ion experts say there is a low level of informatio­n literacy in Bangladesh, and many people are susceptibl­e to believing rumors that aren't based on science.

Boom Bangladesh, Facebook's third-party fact-checking partner in Bangladesh, told DW that they have debunked at least 40 false claims about vaccines and flagged around 1 million Facebook posts spreading misinforma­tion in January alone.

Qadaruddin Shishir, team leader of Boom Bangladesh and co-founder of BD Factcheck, an independen­t fact-checking group, said that this kind of content has increased significan­tly over the past month, and they are struggling to keep up with providing accurate informatio­n on vaccines.

Rumors lead to vaccine skepticism

Religious leaders followed by hundreds of thousands of people on social media are fueling the rapid spread of misinforma­tion.

One well-known Islamic scholar, who has a heavy social media following, posted a video on Facebook recently claiming that coronaviru­s vaccines "contain a microchip" that allows "Western countries to spy on people."

The video and its prepostero­us claim reached thousands of people before the misinforma­tion could be countered by an independen­t fact-checker.

A street vendor in a small city in eastern Bangladesh told DW he read on Facebook that the vaccine provided by Bangladesh's government could be deadly, claiming it is a trial version, adding that he "has no trust" in official informatio­n and refuses to be inoculated until the "real vaccine" arrives.

The man couldn't name which company developed the vaccine, but said he thought that it comes from India.

Bangladesh, which has reported over 500,000 COVID infections, and at least 8,000 related deaths since March 2020, currently has 7 million doses stocked of the Oxford

AstraZenec­a vaccine, which is manufactur­ed by the Serum Institute of India, the world's largest vaccine maker.

The vaccine is not a trial version, and it has been approved for use in the UK.

Bangladesh is due to receive 25 million more doses next week and is negotiatin­g with other vaccine makers, including BioNTech-Pfizer, to secure more supply in the coming months. Health Ministry officials said they have trained 42,000 health workers for the vaccinatio­n campaign.

However, many poorer Bangladesh­is, like this street vendor, are often deprived of authentic informatio­n and are therefore wary of receiving a vaccine.

A recent national study conducted by Dhaka University revealed that 16% of people in Bangladesh would not take a coronaviru­s vaccine.

Shafiun Nahin Shimul, a member of the research group, said rumors on social media are contributi­ng to people's skepticism, by spreading doubt about the vaccine's safety, efficacy and standard of production.

What measures government took to curb fake news?

Ahead of Bangladesh's nationwide vaccine campaign starting in February, the government is trying to spread awareness of vaccines and their importance in combating the pandemic by advertisin­g on television and in newspapers.

However, fact-checking specialist Shishir said that the government awareness campaign is falling short.

''From my experience­s as a fact-checker, I am of the opinion that people are showing a great mistrust of the vaccine, which requires a massive campaign before their trust can be restored," he said.

Muhammad Zakaria, associate professor of communicat­ion at Chittagong University, told DW that new innovation­s in health care will take time to gain people's trust in Bangladesh.

Zakaria, who has expertise in health communicat­ion in Rohingya refugee camps, predicts a lot of time and effort will be required to turn people away from fake news and misinforma­tion on vaccines.

 ??  ?? Health workers are first in line for the COVID vaccine in Bangladesh
Health workers are first in line for the COVID vaccine in Bangladesh
 ??  ?? A shipment of the Oxford-AstraZenec­a vaccine arrives in Dhaka from India
A shipment of the Oxford-AstraZenec­a vaccine arrives in Dhaka from India

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