The News-Times

Pressure builds against doctors peddling false virus claims

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They have decried COVID-19 as a hoax, promoted unproven treatments and pushed bogus claims about the vaccine, including that the shots magnetize the human body.

The purveyors of this misinforma­tion are not shadowy figures operating in the dark corners of the internet. They are a small but vocal group of doctors practicing medicine in communitie­s around the country.

Now medical boards are under increasing pressure to act. Organizati­ons that advocate for public health have called on them to take a harder line by disciplini­ng the doctors, including potentiall­y revoking their licenses. The push comes as the pandemic enters a second winter and deaths in the U.S. top 800,000.

At least a dozen regulatory boards in states such as Oregon, Rhode Island, Maine and Texas recently issued sanctions against some doctors, but many of the most prolific promoters of COVID-19 falsehoods still have unblemishe­d medical licenses.

“Just because it is physicians, it is no different than if someone called you claiming to be the IRS trying to steal your money,” said Brian Castrucci, president and chief executive officer of the de Beaumont Foundation. “It’s a scam, and we protect Americans from scams.”

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