Health Care Professionals Fight COVID Disinformation On Social Media Battlefield

Some doctors and nurses are taking their COVID care beyond the bedside. They’re using social media to share medical information and to push back against rumors and fear. For this Us & Them episode, host Trey Kay speaks with medical professionals who are using social media to enhance their approach to COVID care.

Health care workers are the glue in our public health system. They’ve seen firsthand the impacts of messaging around COVID-19 — the good, the bad, and the downright dangerous — especially on social media. That fire hose of information shaped our experience of the pandemic.

The internet has also catapulted dangerous misinformation about the virus and treatment into mainstream public opinion. It’s a crisis some health care workers are taking to task themselves.

In a new Us & Them episode, host Trey Kay talks with some of the internet’s favorite doctors and nurses about what that movement should look like.

This episode of Us & Them is presented with support from The Greater Kanawha Valley Foundation and the CRC Foundation.

This program was made possible by funding from the National Endowment for the Humanities and the federal American Rescue Plan Act of 2021 through the West Virginia Humanities Council. Any views, findings, conclusions or recommendations do not necessarily represent those of the West Virginia Humanities Council or the National Endowment for the Humanities.

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Donn Jones
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Vanderbilt University Medical School
Dr. Wes Ely is an ICU doctor and professor at the Vanderbilt University Medical Center in Nashville. He had extensive experience with the AIDS epidemic in the 1980s and 90s. He’s also been heavily involved in caring for patients during the COVID pandemic. The deluge of incorrect information about COVID-19 motivated Ely to do more than just treat the patients in his own hospital. So he started posting science-based information on social media to counter a fire hose of misinformation and disinformation.

View some of Dr. Ely’s TikTok posts:

United Nations
Melissa Fleming is the Undersecretary-General for Global Communications at the United Nations. It’s her job to talk to people about big, difficult topics. When COVID was first discovered, she worried institutions like the UN were not up to the fight. Her group at the UN initiated an experiment called Team Halo, where they trained 100 scientists around the world to become active on social media and compete with some of the world’s worst disinformation actors. This was the beginning of something relatively new in the world of public health — an intentional effort to encourage people with expertise in medicine and infectious diseases to take to social media.

View some of Undersecretary-General Melissa Fleming’s video posts:

Siyab Panhwar
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TikTok
Dr. Siyab Panhwar is a cardiologist based in Louisiana. He’s a part of the UN’s Team Halo — a global group of medical professionals who have taken to social media to combat disinformation about treatment for the COVID pandemic. He has a big platform — more than 400,000 followers — and his content feels somewhere in the middle of the ‘us and them’ approach to COVID information. He falls in between simple PSAs about health and aggressive callouts on disinformation.

View some of Dr. Panhwar’s TikTok posts:

Jarred Vincent
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TikTok
Jarred Vincent is not part of Team Halo — but he was working as a nurse at the start of the pandemic. Since then, he’s taken his passion for healthcare to TikTok…and gained over half a million followers along the way. He takes a more aggressive approach to calling out spreaders of misinformation and disinformation.

View some of Jarred Vincent’s TikTok posts:

April 24, 2001: Civil Rights Leader Leon Sullivan Dies at 78

Civil rights leader Leon Sullivan died on April 24, 2001, at age 78. The Charleston native graduated from Garnet High School and West Virginia State College before being trained in the ministry at Union Theological Seminary and Columbia University. In 1950, he became minister of Philadelphia’s Zion Baptist Church. During his 38 years at Zion Baptist, the church grew into one of the nation’s largest congregations.

In 1971, Sullivan became the first African American to serve on the board of General Motors. In 1977, he initiated the Sullivan Principles, a code of conduct for companies operating in South Africa, which was segregated racially by apartheid. General Motors and other companies adopted the Sullivan Principles, which proved to be one of the most effective strategies for ending apartheid. In 1999, the United Nations adopted the ‘‘Global Sullivan Principles’’ as an international corporate code of conduct.

Sullivan also founded the Opportunities Industrialization Centers, or O.I.C., which created jobs in some 70 U.S. cities and countries around the world. He was awarded the Presidential Medal of Freedom, and in 2000, the city of Charleston renamed a major thoroughfare Leon Sullivan Way.

UN Poverty Report Finds “Shocking” Inequality In World’s Richest Nation

The United Nations has published a report on poverty in the U.S. based on a fact-finding tour that included parts of the Ohio Valley.

The UN report says that of the 40 million poor Americans about 5.3 million live in “Third World conditions of absolute poverty.”

The study also suggests recent tax reforms will worsen the situation for U.S. citizens and ensure that the country remains the most unequal society in the developed world.

UN Special Rapporteur for Human Rights Philip Alston was the report’s lead author. In an interview with the Ohio Valley ReSource, he said poverty has significant human rights implications.

“I think that if people are really living in very poor circumstances their ability to exercise a lot of their basic civil rights is greatly impaired,” he said.

Alston spoke to the ReSource in December as he toured the country, including a stop in Charleston, West Virginia.

This week he released his final report which finds the U.S. has the highest rate of income inequality among Western countries. In 2018 the country had more than 25 percent of the world’s billionaires. Alston also found the U.S. does not provide adequate funding to address its opioid crisis.

The country also has one of the lowest voter turnout rates among developed countries, with just a little more than half  of the population casting ballots in the 2016 presidential election.

Alston said it’s the responsibility of the government to make sure its people are able to live with dignity. He hopes this report will enlighten leaders in the U.S. to improve the lives of those in poverty.

“I think one of my challenges to the extent that I find really serious problems is to shed light on those, put the spotlight on them, and hopefully a government that really cares would really respond and try to address those problems,” he said.

Some of the report’s suggestions include reducing the incarcerated population, funding social programs, recognizing a right to health care and reducing income inequality.

UN Expert on Extreme Poverty Visits West Virginia

A United Nations expert on extreme poverty and human rights visited Charleston today for a public meeting on the systemic causes and manifestations of poverty in West Virginia.

The meeting covered social protection and the criminalization of homelessness, as well as health and rural poverty. About 40 people attended – including representatives from groups such as West Virginia Free, the West Virginia Center on Budget and Policy Priorities and West Virginians for Affordable Health Care.

Professor Philip Alston is the current Special Rapporteur on extreme poverty and human rights. His job is to conduct research and analysis for the Human Rights Council and General Assembly, which includes visits to determine violations of human rights around the world.

In a November announcement of the U.S. visit, Alston said,  “some might ask why a UN Special Rapporteur on extreme poverty and human rights would visit a country as rich as the United States. But despite great wealth in the US, there also exists great poverty and inequality.”

Alston has been in the U.S. since the first of December and has visited cities in California, Alabama, Georgia and Puerto Rico. He returns to Washington, D.C. tomorrow for the end of his tour.

 

Appalachia Health News is a project of West Virginia Public Broadcasting, with support from the Marshall Health, Charleston Area Medical Center and WVU Medicine.

'Poverty Tour' Brings United Nations Expert To Ohio Valley

Law professor Philip Alston is a United Nations expert on extreme poverty. In his position as a U.N. Special Rapporteur  he reports on places where pervasive poverty and human rights issues intersect, places such as Haiti, south Asia and central Africa. His latest work, however, is taking him to parts of the U.S., including the Ohio Valley.

  “The United States has been very keen for me and others to investigate human rights issues in other countries, which I have done,” Alston said. “Now, it’s the turn to look at what’s going on in the U.S. There are pretty extreme levels of poverty in the United States given the wealth of the country. And that does have significant human rights implications.”  

Alston visits Charleston, West Virginia, next Wednesday to gather information on pockets of poverty in the world’s richest country. The visit will include a town hall on topics including gaps in the social protection system, health issues including water and sanitation, the opioid crisis, access to healthcare, and the criminalization of the poor.

The ‘Crime’ of Poverty

“It isn’t a crime to be poor,” said Joseph Cohen, Executive Director of the American Civil Liberties Union of West Virginia. The ACLU is among the groups that will discuss the systemic causes of poverty in the region during Alston’s visit.

“Local governments criminalize poverty through actions like passing ordinances for people to beg,” Cohen said. “And because of our state’s uneven and unfair cash bail system, our jails are overcrowded with people who have not been convicted of any crimes, they are sitting in jail because they can’t afford to make their bond.”

Cohen said that the southern parts of West Virginia are plagued with addiction issues, untreated mental illness and homelessness.  

 

Credit Alexandra Kanik / Ohio Valley ReSource
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Ohio Valley ReSource

“The Charleston Police Department recently estimated that there are 1,000 homeless people in Charleston, which is a city of less than 50,000 people,” Cohen said. The estimate indicates 400 of those people are in shelters and 600 on the street. “That is an unbelievably high proportion of our population that is without the basic necessities of life.”

In the Ohio Valley region, more 2.5 million people live in poverty. Nearly 1.2 million of those people live in deep poverty, families making below 50% of the poverty level.  

The thresholds for deep poverty vary according to the size of the family and ages of family members. For example, a single parent household with three children would qualify for poverty status if earning less than $19,337. Single mothers head more than half of the households in poverty.

Outsider Perspective

Jack Frech is a 40-year veteran of anti-poverty efforts in southern Ohio where he led the Athens County welfare department for many years.

“In my 40 years, I have never seen a time when families are suffering as much as they are today,” he said.  

Part of his advocacy included leading lawmakers, officials and media members on tours of poverty stricken areas in Ohio’s Appalachian southeastern counties. But he said little came of those efforts.

“To be blunt about it, neither political party wants to be the political party that bailed out poor people,” Frech said, but he is hopeful the U.N. visit could have a different effect.

“Having somebody from outside this country come and take an objective look at how we treat poor people, you know, maybe that will help wake people up in this country to moving in a different direction.”

The thing Frech believes would surprise people the most, is “we now have millions of people with no cash income whatsoever.”

He said this is documented in the monthly food stamp reports compiled by the U.S. Department of Agriculture, a program Frech administered at the local level.  

“We threw thousands of families off of assistance because they weren’t able to do the work requirements,” he said.

According to the most recent report, 20 percent of those households on Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program, or SNAP, had no cash income of any kind in the month the data were collected.

The Institute for Research on Poverty shows supplemental benefits like SNAP play an important role in reducing extreme poverty.

The most recent report shows SNAP “reduced the depth and severity of poverty by 15.1 and 19.0 percent, respectively.” However, the authors note that statistics on poverty are prone to underreporting, and the actual impacts of SNAP may be twice as high.

The Trump administration has proposed more than $150 billion dollars in cuts to SNAP over the next ten years.

Health Services

The U.N. visit will also explore access to health care for the poor, including a focus on women’s health services. Margaret Chapman Pomponio directs the reproductive rights advocacy group WV FREE, which will participate in the U.N. town hall. She said systemic poverty significantly affects the reproductive health of women in West Virginia.

“We have a serious shortage of women’s health providers.” Pomponio said.  “Many counties lack OB-GYN’s, and we are down to only one clinic that provides abortion care.”

That means many women in West Virginia must travel long distances to receive reproductive health care, she said, and that translates into time away from family and time off from work or school.

“It is not just money lost, but it actually perpetuates an unequal system where the well-heeled are granted access to better health care,” she said.

Pomponio said she thinks the U.N. visit might serve to highlight the benefits of policies in some Scandinavian countries where families receive both maternity and paternity leave, living wages and are guaranteed reproductive rights.

“I think we could learn a lot from the economic and social policies implemented in those countries,” she said.

Politics and Poverty

Special Rapporteur Alston said poverty is always the result of political choices.

“Politicians who say, ‘there’s nothing I can do about that’ are simply wrong,” he said.  

“The idea of human rights is that people have basic dignity and that it’s the role of the government — yes, the government! — to ensure that no one falls below the decent level,” he said.  “Civilized society doesn’t say for people to go and make it on your own and if you can’t, bad luck.”

Alston has just begun his nation wide fact finding mission with events in California. Other stops on the tour include Alabama, Georgia, and Puerto Rico, before concluding in Washington D.C. He said he is still in the process of looking at changes since the 1996 Welfare Reform Law that was implemented during the Clinton administration and what may come from further proposed reductions in assistance programs.

“What I’m seeing so far is that those who are dependent on welfare benefits are enjoying those benefits at an extraordinarily low level. They are really living on the margins, if not below,” he said. “And if there were really major cuts, then I think it would require a whole rethinking of the entire system because it wouldn’t survive.”  

Alston will share his preliminary observations and recommendations at a press conference on December 15, at the U.N. Information Center in Washington DC. A final report on his visit to the United States will be available in spring, 2018.  

 

UN Expert to Visit, Study Effects of Efforts to End Poverty

A United Nations expert on extreme poverty and human rights will visit West Virginia’s capital city during a fact-finding trip to the United States.

A statement from the U.N. says professor Philip Alston will travel to the United States in December to investigate government efforts to eradicate poverty in the country, and how this relates to the United States’ obligations under international human rights law.

The American Civil Liberties Union of West Virginia executive director, Joseph Cohen, tells The Charleston Gazette-Mail that Alston’s Charleston visit will focus on social protection and the criminalizing of poverty, among other things.

Cohen says Alston will have a town hall-style meeting with representatives from non-government organizations, meet with government officials and possibly visit a health clinic.

He’ll also visit Washington, D.C., California, Alabama, Georgia and Puerto Rico.

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