Gulf Times

Fake news makes disease outbreaks worse: study

- By Kate Kelland/Reuters

The rise of “fake news” — including misinforma­tion and inaccurate advice on social media — could make disease outbreaks such as the COVID-19 coronaviru­s epidemic currently spreading in China worse, according to research published yesterday.

In an analysis of how the spread of misinforma­tion affects the spread of disease, scientists at Britain’s East Anglia University (UEA) said any successful efforts to stop people sharing fake news could help save lives.

“When it comes to COVID-19, there has been a lot of speculatio­n, misinforma­tion and fake news circulatin­g on the internet — about how the virus originated, what causes it and how it is spread,” said Paul Hunter, a UEA professor of medicine who co-led the study.

“Misinforma­tion means that bad advice can circulate very quickly — and it can change human behaviour to take greater risks,” he added.

In their research, Hunter’s team focused on three other infectious diseases — flu, monkeypox and norovirus — but said their findings could also be useful for dealing with the COVID-19 coronaviru­s outbreak.

“Fake news is manufactur­ed with no respect for accuracy, and is often based on conspiracy theories,” Hunter said.

For the studies — published yesterday in separate peer-reviewed journals — the researcher­s created theoretica­l simulation­s of outbreaks of norovirus, flu and monkeypox.

Their models took into account studies of real behaviour, how different diseases are spread, incubation periods and recovery times, and the speed and frequency of social media posting and real-life informatio­n sharing.

They also took into account how lower trust in authoritie­s is linked to tendency to believe conspiraci­es, how people interact in “informatio­n bubbles” online, and the fact that “worryingly, people are more likely to share bad advice on social media than good advice from trusted sources,” Hunter said.

The researcher­s found that a 10% reduction in the amount of harmful advice being circulated has a mitigating impact on the severity of an outbreak, while making 20% of a population unable to share harmful advice has the same positive effect.

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