Health Misinformation in Social Networks: A Survey of IT Approaches

Papanikou, Vasiliki, Papadakos, Panagiotis, Karamanidou, Theodora, Stavropoulos, Thanos G., Pitoura, Evaggelia, Tsaparas, Panayiotis

arXiv.org Artificial Intelligence 

The spread of misinformation online, most commonly known as fake news, is an important issue that has become more pronounced in the last two decades due to the prevalence of social media. Platforms like Twitter, Reddit, and Facebook, have been commonly identified as the main channels for propagating misinformation and have been criticized for not acting on addressing the conditions that permit the circulation and amplification of false information [32]. Such misinformation includes false claims and non fact-checked news items, that originate from sources of questionable credibility [113]. The problem of misinformation becomes critical when it pertains to healthcare and health issues, since it puts lives and the public health at risk. One of the first cases of widely spread misinformation in the medical domain is the falsehood that the MMR vaccine (Measles, Mumps, Rubella) causes autism [109]. The falsehood originated from a fraudulent article titled "Ileal-lymphoid-nodular hyperplasia, non-specific colitis, and pervasive developmental disorder in children" published in the prestigious Lancet journal in 1998 [171, 197]. This study turned tens of thousands of parents against the vaccine, and as a result, in 2020, many countries, including the United Kingdom, Greece, Venezuela, and Brazil, lost their measles elimination status. In 2020, twenty-two years after publishing this study Lancet retracted the paper [203].