The Precision Education and Assessment Research Lab, Department of Emergency Medicine, Stanford University, Palo Alto, CA, United States.
Stanford University, Stanford, CA, United States.
J Med Internet Res. 2022 Feb 1;24(2):e35552. doi: 10.2196/35552.
COVID-19 is currently the third leading cause of death in the United States, and unvaccinated people continue to die in high numbers. Vaccine hesitancy and vaccine refusal are fueled by COVID-19 misinformation and disinformation on social media platforms. This online COVID-19 infodemic has deadly consequences. In this editorial, the authors examine the roles that social media companies play in the COVID-19 infodemic and their obligations to end it. They describe how fake news about the virus developed on social media and acknowledge the initially muted response by the scientific community to counteract misinformation. The authors then challenge social media companies to better mitigate the COVID-19 infodemic, describing legal and ethical imperatives to do so. They close with recommendations for better partnerships with community influencers and implementation scientists, and they provide the next steps for all readers to consider. This guest editorial accompanies the Journal of Medical Internet Research special theme issue, "Social Media, Ethics, and COVID-19 Misinformation."
COVID-19 目前是美国的第三大致死原因,未接种疫苗的人仍大量死亡。社交媒体平台上的 COVID-19 错误信息和虚假信息助长了疫苗犹豫和疫苗拒绝。这种在线 COVID-19 信息疫情带来了致命的后果。在这篇社论中,作者探讨了社交媒体公司在 COVID-19 信息疫情中的作用以及它们结束这场疫情的义务。他们描述了有关病毒的假新闻是如何在社交媒体上发展起来的,并承认科学界最初对反击错误信息的反应较为迟缓。作者随后向社交媒体公司提出了更好地减轻 COVID-19 信息疫情的挑战,描述了这样做的法律和道德必要性。他们以更好的社区影响者和实施科学家合作的建议结束,并为所有读者提供了下一步需要考虑的事项。这篇客座社论是与《医学互联网研究杂志》特刊“社交媒体、伦理和 COVID-19 错误信息”一起发表的。