https://www.nytimes.com/2020/08/28/...l?action=click&module=Opinion&pgtype=Homepage
One of the authors Spencer contracted Ebola.
One of the authors Spencer contracted Ebola.
The news came from a colleague — not a doctor but someone who works in the emergency room and has seen firsthand the devastation caused by the pandemic. “There is a cure for Covid-19,” he said. “It must be true because a doctor friend shared a Facebook post about this cure.”
Public health organizations have been unable to keep up with the deluge of sophisticated medical myths and pseudoscience shared on Facebook. Despite the efforts of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention and the World Health Organization, content from the top 10 health misinformation sites received four times as many Facebook views as content from the C.D.C., W.H.O. and eight other leading health institutions during April 2020.
Public health organizations have been unable to keep up with the deluge of sophisticated medical myths and pseudoscience shared on Facebook. Despite the efforts of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention and the World Health Organization, content from the top 10 health misinformation sites received four times as many Facebook views as content from the C.D.C., W.H.O. and eight other leading health institutions during April 2020.
That's probably playing an even bigger role than I suspected. Especially with the growing use of the MUS approach, people simply get used to not only medicine being useless and indifferent at helping them, a choice made by not doing serious research and relying on absurd beliefs about the magical power of the mind, but actually insulting about it turns them off medicine completely. The normal expected course would be that medicine take proper care of recording all those failures and actively be researching them. When people realize medicine is actually doing the exact opposite of that, entirely on purpose, they understand that medicine is unable to help, encouraging them to go to unofficial voodoo, since at least it's not insulting like the official voodoo.Another problem is that when people leave doctors' surgeries having been fobbed off and told their problems are all in their heads, why would patients trust the doctors?
encouraging them to go to unofficial voodoo, since at least it's not insulting like the official voodoo.