The Pandemic Vaccines and E-Cigarettes: Online Health Misinformation
Increasingly, online advice has become to dominate people’s healthcare decisions, versus guidelines issued by professional medical and health government agencies. When vaccines for polio, measles, mumps, rubella, and other serious childhood illnesses were issued in the 20th century, the question was not if a child should receive such vaccines but when. Similarly, when the Surgeon General categorically stated that smoking was hazardous to human health, people likewise accepted the need to quit, or, at minimum acknowledged that if they continued smoking, they were doing so in defiance of commonsense because they were addicted.
Today, this is no longer the case. When vaccines for COVID-19 were readily available to the public, many people combed websites of dubious authorship and looked for alternative sources of information. Some people refused to take the vaccines at all, because of side effects or complications they read about online, despite warnings from the CDC that the risks of contracting the illness were greater than the risks of taking vaccines. Although e-cigarettes still pose a risk to human health, many smokers defend their choice as healthy, based upon propaganda they read online by retailers themselves.
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