The Age of Health Misinformation: From Pandemic to Infodemic
COVID-19 has sadly fuelled a torrent of false or misleading information that has complicated efforts to limit the spread of the virus
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The world has been taken hostage by the coronavirus pandemic since late December 2019. In the years since, it did not only infect and kill but was also an unwitting accomplice to another relentless foe that entered our homes and lives as easily as the virus itself: misinformation.
Dr Chris SHEN, Associate Professor and Associate Head at City University of Hong Kong’s Department of Media and Communication says, “Misinformation is basically false or misleading information that is presented in news format. There are two key words here, one is ‘false’, describing the inaccuracy of the information; the second is ‘misleading’. Not all misinformation is intentionally trying to mislead—sometimes it’s a mistake that is avoidable. Disinformation, though, is clearly designed to sway people’s opinion in a certain direction.”
Shen explains that the contributing factors that help spread misinformation can be examined from two sides: the production side and the consumption side.
At the production side we ask ourselves the question: who is responsible for the emergence of misinformation?
“Both political and economic motivations can contribute to the production of misinformation,” says Shen. “There have been cases where countries can use social media to influence the politics of other countries.” In this he has alleged Russian interference in US elections in mind, for example. “A bigger contributing factor could be economic motivations, because misleading information really has a market out there.”