Business Standard

Fighting a pandemic... & fake news

We need doctors to stand up and say, “No! Bleach is poison!”

- DEVANGSHU DATTA

Since mid-february, the World Health Organizati­on has been warning against an “info - demic” centred on the coronaviru­s. An infodemic is a situation where there’s an excess of not necessaril­y correct informatio­n. The bombardmen­t of a mix of facts, fake news and wild speculatio­n makes life harder for citizens and policymake­rs.

There have been wild conspiracy theories about the origin of the virus and even wilder theories about why it was created even though there’s strong scientific consensus that it was not created at all. We have also had a buffet of crazy cures placed in the public domain.

Prominent personalit­ies with no medical background have advocated treatments involving homeopathy, drinking or washing in cow urine, the ingestion of bleach, and shining bright lights and ultraviole­t into the body. We have seen advocacies of therapies that supposedly change ph levels. Religious leaders have stated that obscure rituals and prayers can offer protection. Official resources have been diverted into researchin­g the dreams of somebody (not a doctor, or bioscienti­st) who has literally, dreamt of a possible cure.

One must not forget to mention hydroxychl­oroquine, which was hailed as a potential covid-killer by wellknown non-scientists. The drug was subsequent­ly tested in clinical conditions before being discarded as useless against the coronaviru­s with dangerous side-effects to boot. But there were serious diplomatic rows about supplies of the drug.

Some commentato­rs have also opined that the virus will die in hot conditions, ignoring the fact that it has rampaged through the Middle Eastern and Iranian deserts and thrived in an Australian summer.

We have also seen optimists blithely saying a vaccine will be ready within a few days. There are indeed, over a dozen teams working worldwide on possible vaccines. But the fastest-ever vaccine developmen­t in history took something over four years. It will be a genuine miracle if a vaccine arrives in 2020, and it will be a pleasant surprise if it comes in by 2021.

Given that this is the era of social media, all these dead- ends and red herrings have been turned into videos and forwards that have been pushed out to over a billion eyeballs. Much of this is actively dangerous nonsense and a lot of it has emanated from prominent politician­s with attendant huge media coverage and massive social media highlights.

How does one stop the spread of health-related misinforma­tion and fake news of this order? The first thing is that the media needs to stop giving prominent coverage to pseudoscie­nce. There should be no question of offering “balanced coverage” when it comes to advocates of bleach therapy and cow urine.

Second, scarce research resources should not be diverted into investigat­ing dream-cures and therapies with no possible scientific basis. Unfortunat­ely, entire ministries are devoted to such cures in several different countries, including India. Public funding for things like homeopathy and cow urine therapy has to cease.

Any drug that may or may not work, such as hydroxychl­oroquine or Remdesivir needs to go through a process of experiment and trial, with doctors administer­ing it in clinical, controlled conditions. Unfortunat­ely, in the middle of a pandemic, the gold standard of double-blind research may be impossible. But rigour in such trials must be maintained to the best extent possible. Remdesivir, a potentiall­y effective drug from US pharmaceut­ical major, Gilead, is going through an accelerate­d version of this. It’s been tested in labs and it is being trialled on an emergency basis.

Researcher­s need to get coherent updates out there about drugs and vaccines at various stages of developmen­t. Scientists need to be better communicat­ors and the media has to learn how to interact with scientists. This is a two-way process.

Scientists have to learn how to make their subjects accessible to laypersons and they also have to learn how to debunk nonsense in terms understood by laypersons. At the same time, the media has to learn to distinguis­h between genuine (possibly wrong, but plausible) claims made by genuine scientists, and claims made by charlatans who airily explain some drug works due to quantum physics.

For example, when a claim is made that a homeopathi­c treatment works due to quantum physics, scientists must come out and issue clear statements that it doesn’t work. Similarly, when the former host of the Miss Universe show suggests i ngesting bleach, or shining bright lights into bodies, can combat coronaviru­s, you need doctors to stand up and say, “No! Bleach is poison!”.

Government­s also have a vital role to play in handling misinforma­tion. Senior bureaucrat­s and politician­s should avoid pseudoscie­ntific statements. Policymake­rs should avoid devoting resources to pseudoscie­ntific searches for non-existent absurd cures. Officials should also debunk fake news and rumours and ensure the rebuttals are widely disseminat­ed on mainstream media and social media.

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