USA TODAY International Edition

Fauci, Murthy slam online inaction

Administra­tion aims at vaccine misinforma­tion

- Matthew Brown

WASHINGTON – Biden administra­tion public health officials took aim Sunday at social media platforms like Facebook for perceived inaction on stopping misinforma­tion about COVID- 19 and vaccines. It comes two days after the president himself said falsehoods online are “killing people.”

Alarmed by rising coronaviru­s infections across the country and frustrated by persistent conspiracy theories about the pandemic, public health officials are more forcefully criticizin­g media and tech platforms they argue are endangerin­g the public.

Surgeon General Vivek Murthy, the federal government’s top public health adviser, said Sunday that “misinforma­tion is still spreading like wildfire in our country aided and abetted by technology platforms.”

He said he has been in conversati­on with major technology platforms and expressed his concerns about public health misinforma­tion online. Murthy added that current efforts from Big Tech are “not enough.”

“When we talk to people who believe some of these myths about the COVID- 19 vaccine about COVID itself and ask them where to get that informatio­n, many of them point to their social media platforms,” Murthy said on “Fox News Sunday.” He added that an “all- of- society approach” was necessary to combating misinforma­tion, including interventi­ons from private actors, including tech platforms, to boost vaccinatio­n rates and curb distrust of public health guidelines.

In a CNN interview Sunday, Dr. Anthony Fauci, director of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases, said past vaccinatio­n campaigns wouldn’t have been nearly as effective had they also been hampered by misinforma­tion.

“If we had had the pushback for vaccines the way we’re seeing on certain media, I don’t think it would’ve been possible at all to not only eradicate smallpox, we probably would still have smallpox,” Fauci said, further speculatin­g that “we probably would still have polio in this country if we had the kind of false informatio­n that’s being spread now.”

The comments come after two weeks of rising cases nationally. A more contagious strain of the virus, the delta variant, has taken hold across the country. Missouri and Arkansas, which have low vaccinatio­n rates, are among the hardest hit.

President Joe Biden, who urged Americans to celebrate an “Independen­ce Day” from the coronaviru­s on July 4, targeted social media platforms for inaction on falsehoods that he says has deadly consequenc­es. “They’re killing people,” Biden said when asked Friday what his message is to platforms like Facebook. “The only pandemic we have is among the unvaccinat­ed. And they’re killing people.” Facebook was quick to push back. “We will not be distracted by accusation­s which aren’t supported by the facts,” Facebook spokespers­on Dani Lever told ABC News. “More than 2 billion people have viewed authoritat­ive informatio­n about COVID- 19 and vaccines on Facebook, which is more than any other place on the internet.” Lever noted that 3 million Americans have used Facebook platforms to set up vaccinatio­n appointmen­ts.

Facebook has not disclosed the number of people who may have seen pandemic- or vaccine- related misinforma­tion on its platform.

When asked whether Biden thought Facebook was doing enough to combat the spread of misinforma­tion, White House press secretary Jen Psaki said, “Clearly not, because we’re talking about additional steps that should be taken.”

 ??  ?? Murthy
Murthy
 ??  ?? Fauci
Fauci

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States