Monterey Herald

`Died suddenly' posts twist tragedies to push vaccine lies

- By Ali Swenson and Angelo Fichera

Results from 6-year-old Anastasia Weaver's autopsy may take weeks. But online anti-vaccine activists needed only hours after her funeral this week to baselessly blame the COVID-19 vaccine.

A prolific Twitter account posted Anastasia's name and smiling dance portrait in a tweet with a syringe emoji. A Facebook user messaged her mother, Jessica Day-Weaver, to call her a “murderer” for having her child vaccinated.

In reality, the Ohio kindergart­ner had experience­d lifelong health problems since her premature birth, including epilepsy, asthma and frequent hospitaliz­ations with respirator­y viruses. “The doctors haven't given us any informatio­n other than it was due to all of her chronic conditions . ... There was never a thought that it could be from the vaccine,” Day-Weaver said of her daughter's death.

But those facts didn't matter online, where Anastasia was swiftly added to a growing list of hundreds of children, teens, athletes and celebritie­s whose unexpected deaths and injuries have been incorrectl­y blamed on COVID-19 shots. Using the hashtag #diedsudden­ly, online conspiracy theorists have flooded social media with news reports, obituaries and GoFundMe pages in recent months, leaving grieving families to wrestle with the lies.

There's the 37-year-old Brazilian television host who collapsed live on air because of a congenital heart problem. The 18-yearold unvaccinat­ed bull rider

who died from a rare disease. The 32-year-old actress who died from bacterial infection complicati­ons.

The use of “died suddenly” — or a misspelled version of it — has surged more than 740% in tweets about vaccines over the past two months compared with the two previous months, the media intelligen­ce firm Zignal Labs found in an analysis conducted for The Associated Press. The phrase's explosion began with the late November debut of an online “documentar­y” by the same name, giving power to what experts say is a new and damaging shorthand.

“It's kind of in-group language, kind of a wink wink, nudge nudge,” said Renee DiResta, technical research manager at the Stanford Internet Observator­y. “They're taking something that is a relatively

routine way of describing something — people do, in fact, die unexpected­ly — and then by assigning a hashtag to it, they aggregate all of these incidents in one place.”

The campaign causes harm beyond just the internet, epidemiolo­gist Dr. Katelyn Jetelina said.

“The real danger is that it ultimately leads to real world actions such as not vaccinatin­g,” said Jetelina, who tracks and breaks down COVID data for her blog, “Your Local Epidemiolo­gist.”

Rigorous study and realworld evidence from hundreds of millions of administer­ed shots prove that COVID-19 vaccines are safe and effective. Deaths caused by vaccinatio­n are extremely rare and the risks associated with not getting vaccinated are far higher than the risks of vaccinatio­n. But that hasn't

stopped conspiracy theorists from lobbing a variety of untrue accusation­s at the vaccines.

The “Died Suddenly” film features a montage of headlines found on Google to falsely suggest they prove that sudden deaths have “never happened like this until now.” The film has amassed more than 20 million views on an alternativ­e video sharing website, and its companion Twitter account posts about more deaths and injuries daily.

An AP review of more than 100 tweets from the account in December and January found that claims about the cases being vaccine related were largely unsubstant­iated and, in some cases, contradict­ed by public informatio­n. Some of the people featured died of genetic disorders, drug overdoses, flu complicati­ons or suicide. One died in a surfing accident.

The filmmakers did not respond to specific questions from the AP, but instead issued a statement that referenced a “surge in sudden deaths” and a “PROVEN rate of excess deaths,” without providing data.

The number of overall deaths in the U.S. has been higher than what would be expected since the start of the COVID-19 pandemic, in part because of the virus, overdoses and other causes. COVID-19 vaccines prevented nearly 2 million U.S. deaths in just their first year of use.

Some deaths exploited in the film predate the pandemic. California writer Dolores Cruz published an essay in 2022 about grieving for her son, who died in a car crash in 2017. “Died Suddenly” used a screenshot of the headline in the film, portraying his death as vaccine related.

 ?? NICK CAMMETT — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Jessica Day-Weaver poses next to a picture collage made for her daughter, Anastasia, at her home in Boardman, Ohio, on Thursday.
NICK CAMMETT — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Jessica Day-Weaver poses next to a picture collage made for her daughter, Anastasia, at her home in Boardman, Ohio, on Thursday.

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