Nurses Who Spread Misinformation: Motives, Ethics, and Remedies
A historically challenging problem presents ‘an urgent task for the nursing profession.’
“Every epidemic of the past has produced improbable facts, confusing rumors, and conspiracy theories,” observed Nancy Tomes, PhD, a history professor at Stony Brook University. She was presenting a lecture at an online meeting of the New York Academy of Medicine in late October. Tomes examined the way misinformation and disinformation during the current pandemic echoes that of past public health crises, from the 1665 outbreak of the bubonic plague in London to the global HIV/AIDS pandemic.
“Misinformation, epidemics, and media revolutions have historically gone hand in hand,” she pointed out, adding:
“One of the most distressing aspects of the COVID-19 pandemic has been the damage done by the easy circulation of false and misleading information.”
Social media as a vector for the spread of misinformation.
The widespread dissemination of such information during the current crisis has been facilitated by the near-omnipresence of social media. This month’s Ethical Issues column in AJN focuses on the way some nurses are engaging in misinformation about COVID on social media (and other) platforms. In “Nurses Spreading Misinformation” (free until January 15), author Pamela Grace, PhD, RN, FAAN, argues that immediate action and education are needed.
“Correcting unethical behavior on social media is an […]