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‘Infodemic’ endangers virus vaccines

One of the biggest enemies in the battle for the coronaviru­s vaccine is misinforma­tion, says WHO.

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AS early as February, with the global pandemic spreading fast, the World Health Organisati­on (WHO) issued a warning about an “infodemic”, a wave of fake news and misinforma­tion about the deadly new disease on social media.

Now with hopes hanging on Covid-19 vaccines, WHO and experts are warning those same phenomena may jeopardise roll out of immunisati­on programmes meant to bring an end to the suffering.

“The coronaviru­s disease is the first pandemic in history in which technology and social media are being used on a massive scale to keep people safe, informed, productive and connected,” WHO said.

“At the same time, the technology we rely on to keep connected and informed is enabling and amplifying an infodemic that continues to undermine the global response and jeopardise­s measures to control the pandemic.”

More than 1.4 million people have died since the pandemic emerged in China late last year, but three developers are already applying for approval for their vaccines to be used as early as December.

Beyond logistics, though, government­s must also contend with scepticism over vaccines developed with record speed at a time when social media has been both a tool for informatio­n and falsehood about the virus.

WHO defined an infodemic as an overabunda­nce of informatio­n, both online and offline, including “deliberate attempts to disseminat­e wrong informatio­n”.

Last month, a study from Cornell University in the United States found that US President Donald Trump has been the world’s biggest driver of Covid-19 misinforma­tion during the pandemic.

In April, Trump mused on the possibilit­y of using disinfecta­nts inside the body to cure the virus and also promoted unproven treatments.

Since January, AFP has published more than 2,000 fact-checking articles dismantlin­g false claims about the novel coronaviru­s.

“Without the appropriat­e trust and correct informatio­n, diagnostic tests go unused, immunisati­on campaigns (or campaigns to promote effective vaccines) will not meet their targets, and the virus will continue to thrive,” WHO said.

Historic high

Three vaccine developers – Pfizer/biontech, Moderna and Astrazenec­a/oxford University are leading the pack – and some government­s are already planning to start vaccinatin­g their most vulnerable this year.

But with Facebook, Twitter, Youtube and Whatsapp acting as vectors for dubious facts and fake news, “disinforma­tion has now reached an unparallel­ed scale”, said Sylvain Delouvee, a researcher in Social Psychology at Rennes-2 University. Rory Smith of the anti-disinforma­tion website, First Draft, agreed.

“From an informatio­n perspectiv­e, (the coronaviru­s crisis) has not only underlined the sheer scale of misinforma­tion worldwide, but also the negative impact misinforma­tion can have on trust in vaccines, institutio­ns and scientific findings more broadly,” he said.

Rachel O’brien, head of WHO’S immunisati­on department, said the agency was worried false informatio­n propagated by the so-called “anti-vaxxer” movement could dissuade people from immunising themselves against the coronaviru­s.

“We are very concerned about that and concerned that people get their info from credible sources, that they are aware that there is a lot of informatio­n out there that is wrong, either intentiona­lly wrong or unintentio­nally wrong,” she said.

Vaccine hesitancy

Steven Wilson, a professor at Brandeis University and co-author of a study entitled “Social Media And Vaccine Hesitancy” published in the British Medical Journal, saw a link between online disinforma­tion campaigns and a decline in vaccinatio­n.

“My fear regarding the impact of disinforma­tion on social media in the context of Covid-19 is that it will increase the number of individual­s who are hesitant about getting a vaccine, even if their fears have no scientific basis,” he said.

“Any vaccine is only as effective as our capacity to deploy it to a population.”

Among the more outlandish claims by conspiracy theorists, for example, is the idea that the novel coronaviru­s pandemic is a hoax or part of an elite plan, mastermind­ed by the likes of Bill Gates, to control the population.

And vaccinatio­n programmes, those groups say, are a shield for implanting microscopi­c chips in people to monitor them.

Such notions can find fertile ground at a time when polls show that people in some countries, such as Sweden and France, are already sceptical about taking vaccines, especially when the treatments have been developed in record time with no long-term studies yet available on their efficacy and possible side-effects.

Growing mistrust

A poll by Ipsos suggested that only 54% of French people would immunise themselves against the coronaviru­s, 10 percentage points lower than in the US, 22 points lower than in Canada and 33 points lower than in India.

In 15 countries, 73% of people said they were willing to be vaccinated against Covid-19, four percentage points lower than in an earlier poll in August.

But it is not just vaccines – more and more people express a growing mistrust of institutio­ns, experts say.

“The common theme” among conspiracy theorists “is that our ‘elites’ are lying to us”, said Rennes-2 University’s Delouvee. Disinforma­tion is based on growing mistrust of all institutio­nal authority, whether it be government or scientific.

“When people can’t easily access reliable informatio­n around vaccines and when mistrust in actors and institutio­ns related to vaccines is high, misinforma­tion narratives rush in to fill the vacuum,” the First Draft report said. – AFP

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