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Google allows advertisers to target the sensitive informational queries of cancer patients
Marco Zenone, Alessandro Marcon, Nora Kenworthy, May van Schalkwyk, Timothy Caulfield, Greg Hartwell and Nason Maani
Alternative cancer treatments are associated with earlier time to death when used without evidence-based treatments. Our study suggests alternative cancer clinics providing scientifically unsupported cancer treatments spent an estimated $15,839,504 on Google ads from 2012 to 2023 targeting users in the United States.

COVID-19
Promoting health literacy during the COVID-19 pandemic: A call to action for healthcare professionals
April Joy Damian and Joseph J. Gallo
The extraordinary spread of misinformation during the COVID-19 pandemic is impressive. And, to public health professionals like us, it’s worrying: We know that good information and good health go hand in hand. Knowing what we do about the practice of public health and what the science tells us about how people fall for misinformation, we see promising strategies for intervention in our own field.

COVID-19
The relation between media consumption and misinformation at the outset of the SARS-CoV-2 pandemic in the US
Kathleen Hall Jamieson and Dolores Albarracín
A US national probability-based survey during the early days of the SARS-CoV-2 spread in the US showed that, above and beyond respondents’ political party, mainstream broadcast media use (e.g., NBC News) correlated with accurate information about the disease’s lethality, and mainstream print media use (e.g.,

COVID-19
Using misinformation as a political weapon: COVID-19 and Bolsonaro in Brazil
Julie Ricard and Juliano Medeiros
With over 30,000 confirmed cases, Brazil is currently the country most affected by COVID-19 in Latin America, and ranked 12th worldwide (John Hopkins University & Medicine, 2020). Despite all evidence, a strong rhetoric undermining risks associated to COVID-19 has been endorsed at the highest levels of the Brazilian government, making President Jair Bolsonaro the leader of the “coronavirus-denial movement” (Friedman, 2020.

How trust in experts and media use affect acceptance of common anti-vaccination claims
Dominik Andrzej Stecula, Ozan Kuru and Kathleen Hall Jamieson
Surveys of nearly 2,500 Americans, conducted during a measles outbreak, suggest that users of traditional media are less likely to be misinformed about vaccines than social media users. Results also suggest that an individual’s level of trust in medical experts affects the likelihood that a person’s beliefs about vaccination will change.