{"id":21723,"date":"2022-12-22T12:54:11","date_gmt":"2022-12-22T11:54:11","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/idibell.cat\/en\/?p=21723"},"modified":"2023-01-04T12:59:25","modified_gmt":"2023-01-04T11:59:25","slug":"does-everything-cause-cancer-beliefs-about-cancer-among-anti-vaxxers-and-flat-earthers-a-call-to-combat-misinformation","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/idibell.cat\/en\/2022\/12\/does-everything-cause-cancer-beliefs-about-cancer-among-anti-vaxxers-and-flat-earthers-a-call-to-combat-misinformation\/","title":{"rendered":"Does everything cause cancer? Beliefs about cancer among anti-vaxxers and flat earthers: a call to combat misinformation"},"content":{"rendered":"
The scientific magazine The British Medical Journal has published in a special Christmas edition a compilation of scientific studies with a satirical component but maintaining rigor. Among them, the results of a survey carried out by a team from IDIBELL and the Catalan Institute of Oncology have been presented, which shows that anti-vaccine groups, flat earthers<\/a>, or reptilians<\/a> are less aware of the agents that can really cause cancer and of those that they are just myths.<\/strong><\/p>\n To collect the data, the researchers circulated a survey among various Internet discussion forums such as ForoCoches, Reddit, 4Chan, or HispaChan. The survey included validated questions about the perception of cancer and the substances that could cause it, there were also more general questions such as if they had been vaccinated against COVID-19, if they thought the earth was flat, or if they believed in the existence of reptilians. In total, almost 1,500 responses were obtained<\/strong>, of which 284 came from people who had not been vaccinated against COVID-19, who preferred alternative medicine, or who believed in some conspiracy theory.<\/p>\n The results show that the followers of some conspiracy theories, particularly flat earthers and defenders of the existence of reptilians, ignore the real causes of cancer and, on the contrary, believe in myths about false carcinogenic factors such as microwaves, mobile phones, or transgenics. The same pattern was observed in those who had not received any dose of the COVID-19 vaccine, or who preferred alternative medicine to conventional medicine.<\/p>\n <\/p>\n <\/p>\n Among all the answers, 673 participants, almost half, maintained that “everything can cause cancer<\/em><\/strong>“, which highlights the difficulty of society in differentiating the real causes and the myths.<\/p>\n This is especially relevant since misinformation can have real consequences on health. “These results, although they come from humor, are important since knowing the causes of cancer is the first step to prevent it<\/em> -says Dr. Laura Costas<\/strong>, principal investigator at IDIBELL and the Catalan Institute of Oncology, and last author of the work-. Being misinformed can lead to adopting preventive measures that are not effective, following risky lifestyles, or rejecting effective prevention actions such as the HPV vaccine or screening, even in the most extreme cases, misinformation can lead to rejecting effective cancer treatments with fatal consequences<\/em>\u201d.<\/p>\n<\/p>\n
Misinformation dangers<\/h3>\n