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Related: Editorials & Other Articles, Issue Forums, Alliance Forums, Region ForumsPseudoscience and COVID-19 -- we've had enough already
https://www.nature.com/articles/d41586-020-01266-zThe scientific community must take up cudgels in the battle against bunk.
Cow urine, bleach and cocaine have all been recommended as COVID-19 cures all guff. The pandemic has been cast as a leaked bioweapon, a byproduct of 5G wireless technology and a political hoax all poppycock. And countless wellness gurus and alternative-medicine practitioners have pushed unproven potions, pills and practices as ways to boost the immune system.
Thankfully, this explosion of misinformation or, as the World Health Organization has called it, the infodemic has triggered an army of fact-checkers and debunkers. Regulators have taken aggressive steps to hold marketers of unproven therapies to account. Funders are supporting researchers (myself included) to explore how best to counter the spread of COVID-19 claptrap.
I have studied the spread and impact of health misinformation for decades, and have never seen the topic being taken as seriously as it is right now. Perhaps that is because of the scale of the crisis and the ubiquity of the nonsensical misinformation, including advice from some very prominent politicians. If this pro-science response is to endure, all scientists not just a few of us must stand up for quality information.
Here are two places to start.
First, we must stop tolerating and legitimizing health pseudoscience, especially at universities and health-care institutions. Many bogus COVID-19 therapies have been embraced by integrative health centres at leading universities and hospitals. If a respected institution, such as the Cleveland Clinic in Ohio, offers reiki a science-free practice that involves using your hands, without even touching the patient, to balance the vital life force energy that flows through all living things is it any surprise that some people will think that the technique could boost their immune systems and make them less susceptible to the virus? A similar argument can be made about public-health providers in Canada and the United Kingdom: by offering homeopathy, they de facto encourage the idea that this scientifically implausible remedy can work against COVID-19. These are just a few of myriad examples.
In my home country of Canada, regulators are currently cracking down on providers such as chiropractors, naturopaths, herbalists and holistic healers who are marketing products against COVID-19. But the idea that a spinal adjustment, intravenous vitamin therapy or homeopathy could fend off an infectious disease was nonsense before the pandemic.
Cow urine, bleach and cocaine have all been recommended as COVID-19 cures all guff. The pandemic has been cast as a leaked bioweapon, a byproduct of 5G wireless technology and a political hoax all poppycock. And countless wellness gurus and alternative-medicine practitioners have pushed unproven potions, pills and practices as ways to boost the immune system.
Thankfully, this explosion of misinformation or, as the World Health Organization has called it, the infodemic has triggered an army of fact-checkers and debunkers. Regulators have taken aggressive steps to hold marketers of unproven therapies to account. Funders are supporting researchers (myself included) to explore how best to counter the spread of COVID-19 claptrap.
I have studied the spread and impact of health misinformation for decades, and have never seen the topic being taken as seriously as it is right now. Perhaps that is because of the scale of the crisis and the ubiquity of the nonsensical misinformation, including advice from some very prominent politicians. If this pro-science response is to endure, all scientists not just a few of us must stand up for quality information.
Here are two places to start.
First, we must stop tolerating and legitimizing health pseudoscience, especially at universities and health-care institutions. Many bogus COVID-19 therapies have been embraced by integrative health centres at leading universities and hospitals. If a respected institution, such as the Cleveland Clinic in Ohio, offers reiki a science-free practice that involves using your hands, without even touching the patient, to balance the vital life force energy that flows through all living things is it any surprise that some people will think that the technique could boost their immune systems and make them less susceptible to the virus? A similar argument can be made about public-health providers in Canada and the United Kingdom: by offering homeopathy, they de facto encourage the idea that this scientifically implausible remedy can work against COVID-19. These are just a few of myriad examples.
In my home country of Canada, regulators are currently cracking down on providers such as chiropractors, naturopaths, herbalists and holistic healers who are marketing products against COVID-19. But the idea that a spinal adjustment, intravenous vitamin therapy or homeopathy could fend off an infectious disease was nonsense before the pandemic.
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Pseudoscience and COVID-19 -- we've had enough already (Original Post)
SidDithers
May 2020
OP
ismnotwasm
(41,984 posts)1. K&R
Pacifist Patriot
(24,653 posts)2. The Cleveland Clinic offers reiki?!?
Holy crap.
Hugin
(33,148 posts)3. Number 1 on the woo science hit list should be the concept of "Herd Immunity"...
The concept is not only racist to it's very core, due to the nature of the class of virus it's a false promise.