WASHINGTON (AP) 鈥 The government agency responsible for tracking down contaminated peanut butter and defective pacemakers is taking on a new health hazard: online misinformation.
It鈥檚 an unlikely role for the Food and Drug Administration, a sprawling, century-old bureaucracy that for decades directed most its communications toward doctors and corporations.
But FDA Commissioner Dr. Robert Califf has spent the last year warning that growing 鈥渄istortions and half-truths鈥 surrounding vaccines and other medical products are now 鈥渁 leading cause of death in America.鈥
鈥淎lmost no one should be dying of COVID in the U.S. today,鈥 Califf told The Associated Press, noting the government's distribution of free vaccines and antiviral medications. 鈥淧eople who are denying themselves that opportunity are dying because they're misinformed.鈥
Califf, who first led the agency under President Barack Obama, said the FDA could once rely on a few communication channels to reach Americans.
鈥淲e鈥檙e now in a 24/7 sea of information without a user guide for people out there in society," Califf said. "So this requires us to change the way we communicate.鈥
The FDA's answer? Short , long and other online debunking medical misinformation, including bogus COVID-19 remedies like ivermectin, the anti-parasite drug intended for farm animals. 鈥淗old your horses y'all. Ivermectin may be trending, but it still isn't authorized or approved to treat COVID-19鈥 the its 500,000 Twitter followers in April.
On Instagram, FDA memes referencing and urge Americans to get boosted and ignore misinformation, alongside staid agency postings about the arrival of 香港六合彩挂牌资料 Handwashing Awareness Week.
The AP asked more than a half-dozen health communication experts about the FDA's fledgling effort. They said it mostly reflects the latest science on combating misinformation, but they also questioned whether it鈥檚 reaching enough people to have an impact 鈥 and whether separate FDA controversies are undercutting the agency's credibility.
鈥淭he question I start with is, 鈥楢re you a trusted messenger or not?'鈥 said Dr. Seema Yasmin, a Stanford University professor who studies medical misinformation and trains health officials in responding to it. 鈥淚n the context of FDA, we can highlight multiple incidents which have damaged the credibility of the agency and deepened distrust of its scientific decisions."
In the last two years the FDA has come under fire for its of an unproven Alzheimer鈥檚 drug as well as its to a contaminated baby formula plant, which contributed to a national supply shortage.
Meanwhile, the agency鈥檚 approach to booster vaccinations has been criticized by some of its and .
鈥淚t鈥檚 not fair, but it doesn鈥檛 take too many negative stories to unravel the public鈥檚 trust,鈥 said Georgetown University鈥檚 Leticia Bode, who studies political communication and misinformation.
About a quarter of Americans said they have 鈥渁 lot鈥 of trust in the FDA's handling of COVID-19, according to a conducted last year by University of Pennsylvania researchers, while less than half said they have 鈥渟ome trust.鈥
"The FDA's word is still one of the most highly regarded pieces of information people want to see,鈥 said Califf, who was confirmed to his second stint leading the FDA last February.
As commissioner he is trying to tackle a host of issues, including restructuring the agency鈥檚 and more aggressively deploying to explain vaccine decisions in the media.
The array of challenges before the FDA raises questions about the new focus on misinformation. And Califf acknowledges the limits of what his agency can accomplish.
鈥淎nyone who thinks the government鈥檚 going to solve this problem alone is deluding themselves," he said. 鈥淲e need a vast network of knowledgeable people who devote part of their day to combating misinformation.鈥
Georgetown's Bode said the agency is 鈥渕oving in the right direction,鈥 on misinformation, particularly its series of factchecking videos, which feature FDA鈥檚 vaccine chief Dr. Peter Marks succinctly addressing a single COVID-19 myth or topic.
But how many people are seeing them?
鈥淔DA鈥檚 YouTube videos have a minuscule audience,鈥 said Brendan Nyhan, who studies medical misinformation at Dartmouth College. The people watching FDA videos 鈥漚re not the people we typically think about when we think about misinformation.鈥
Research by Nyhan and his colleagues suggests that fact-checking COVID-19 myths briefly dispels false beliefs, but the effects are 鈥渆phemeral.鈥 Nyhan and other researchers noted the most trusted medical information source for most Americans is their doctor, not the government.
Even if the audience for FDA鈥檚 work is small, experts in online analytics say it may be having a bigger impact.
An FDA page dubbed debunks a long list of false claims about vaccines, such as that they contain pesticides. A Google search for 鈥渧accines鈥 and 鈥減esticides鈥 brings up the FDA鈥檚 response as a top result, because the search engine prioritizes credible websites.
鈥淏ecause the FDA puts that information on its website, it will actually crowd out the misinformation from the top 10 or 20 Google results,鈥 said David Lazer, a political and computer scientist at Northeastern University.
Perhaps the most promising approach to fighting misinformation is also the toughest to execute: introduce people to emerging misinformation and explain why it鈥檚 false before they encounter it elsewhere.
That technique, called 鈥減re-bunking," presents challenges for large government agencies.
鈥淚s the FDA nimble enough to have a detection system for misinformation and then quickly put out pre-bunking information within hours or days?鈥 Lazer asked.
Califf said the FDA tracks new misinformation trends online and quickly decides whether 鈥 and when 鈥 to intervene.
鈥淪ometimes calling attention to an issue can make it worse,鈥 he notes.
Other communication challenges are baked into how the FDA operates. For instance, the agency consults an on major decisions about COVID-19 shots, considered a key step in fostering trust in the process.
But some of those on who should receive COVID-19 vaccine boosters or how strong the evidence is for their use, particularly among younger people.
The FDA then largely relies on news media to translate those debates and its final decisions, which are often laden with scientific jargon.
The result has been 鈥渦tter confusion,鈥 about the latest round of COVID-19 boosters, says Lawrence Gostin, a public health specialist at Georgetown.
鈥淚f you鈥檙e trying to counteract misinformation on social media your first job is to clarify, simplify and explain things in an understandable way to the lay public,鈥 said Gostin. 鈥淚 don鈥檛 think anyone could say that FDA has done a good job with that.鈥
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The Associated Press Health and Science Department receives support from the Howard Hughes Medical Institute鈥檚 Science and Educational Media Group. The AP is solely responsible for all content.
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This story was first published on Feb. 20, 2023. It was updated on Feb. 21, 2023, to correct the first name of Dartmouth College researcher Brendan Nyhan.