World
Health Organisation (WHO) Regional Director for Africa, Matshidiso Moeti says
Africa Infodemic Response Alliance (AIRA) will fight COVID-19 misinformation in
the continent.
AIRA
was inaugurated by WHO on Thursday to coordinate actions and pool resources in
combating misinformation around COVID-19 pandemic and other health emergencies
in Africa.
In
a statement posted on the WHO Regional Office for Africa’s website, Moeti said
misinformation could kill and ensure diseases continue to spread in health
emergencies.
“People
need proven, science-based facts to make informed decisions about their health
and wellbeing, and a glut of information – an infodemic – with misinformation
in the mix makes it hard to know what is right and real.
“This
crucial new alliance brings unique reach, knowledge and skills to help stop the
impact of dangerous misinformation.’’
According
to the statement, digital platforms have been inundated with COVID-19-related
information since the pandemic began in late 2019.
“Information
about the virus has been shared and viewed over 270 billion times online and
mentioned almost 40 million times on Twitter and web-based news sites in the 47
countries.
“It
has been shared in 47 countries of the WHO African Region between February and
November 2020, according to UN Global Pulse, the United Nations’
Secretary-General’s initiative on big data and artificial intelligence.
“A
large proportion of this information is inaccurate and misleading and continues
to be shared by social media users intentionally or unknowingly every day.
“The
COVID-19 infodemic is amplified online through social media but health
misinformation is also circulating offline.”
In
measuring precisely how much of what is circulating is misinformation is difficult,
but fact-checking organizations in Africa say they have debunked more than 1000
of such misleading reports since the onset of the pandemic.
Some
of the widely shared misinformation includes conspiracies around unproven
treatments, false cures and anti-vaccine messages.
In
addition, WHO stated that among others, the AIRA would work collaboratively to
counter false information around COVID-19 vaccines.
“It
will also complement on the ground public health awareness raising and
community engagement efforts by creating demand for vaccines in the region.
“The
network is the first initiative of its kind and it brings together 13 international
and regional organizations and fact-checking groups.
“The
network comprise experts in data and behavioural science, epidemiology,
research, digital health, and communications to detect, disrupt and counter
damaging misinformation on public health issues in Africa.
“The
Alliance will encourage proactive disclosure by data holders and support
journalists and media outlets to effectively share lifesaving information based
on scientific evidence and debunk disinformation on health issues.
“It
also aims to support individual African countries in developing tailored
infodemic management strategies, including analyzing trends and behaviours,
recruiting specialists and refining systematic engagement strategies rooted in
research and analytics.’’
This
initiative puts into practice key recommendations on infodemic management that
were developed by over 1300 experts from across disciplines in early 2020 under
the auspices of WHO’s global Information Network for Epidemics (EPI-WIN).
The
Alliance members are Africa CDC, the International Federation of the Red Cross
and Red Crescent Societies (IFRC), the United Nations Verified initiative and
the United Nations Children’s Fund (UNICEF).
Others
are the United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization
(UNESCO) and United Nations Global Pulse.
Participating
and supporting bodies include Nigeria’s Dubawa, Africa Check, Agence
France-Presse Fact Check, PesaCheck and Meedan.
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