Fighting disinformation 'requires a little bit of courage' for social media companies: Doctor

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Combatting misinformation has become one of the most important issues the medical community faces, according to experts like Dr. Megan Ranney, an emergency room physician in Providence, R.I.

Just as a new coronavirus variant of concern, Omicron, has been identified, the rush of information shared and discussed on social media sites once again shows how quickly information, and in some cases misinformation, can spread. It's a problem that has been ongoing throughout the pandemic.

Though social media can be a force for good, "the worst of social media has come to the forefront over the course of the pandemic," she told Yahoo Finance.

This time, more public health, virus and medical experts are on social platforms quickly churning out facts and verified information. But even so, with greater knowledge of the social media companies' abilities to control false information, the call for more accountability is growing louder.

More than 800 doctors and health experts have signed onto a letter asking Meta Platforms (FB) CEO Mark Zuckerberg to disclose data and strategies that Facebook is using to help stop the spread of false information about the vaccines and virus. The letter was sent through Doctors for America, a non-profit physician-led advocacy group.

"So many deaths could have been prevented, and we must act with haste to prevent more, particularly with vaccines becoming imminently available for young children. We simply cannot afford another deadly round of COVID and vaccine misinformation," the doctors wrote.

Ranney, and others that signed, said the letter to Facebook signals an attempt to "diagnose" the problem.

"It requires a little bit of courage, and looking beyond potentially the immediate bottom line, to the larger societal good," she said.

'There's a need to regulate algorithmic engagement'

Dr. CĆ©line Gounder, an infectious diseases expert in New York City who formerly served on President Joe Biden's COVID-19 transition team, is the letter's first signatory.

"I think there's no question that having a whistleblower like Francis Haugen has really energized efforts around the spread of disinformation," she said. Haugen is the former Facebook employee who disclosed tens of thousands of the company's internal documents to the Securities and Exchange Commission and The Wall Street Journal in 2021.

"There's a need to regulate algorithmic engagement," she added, noting it's easier said than done.

Another signatory, Dr. Robert Davidson, executive director of The Committee to Protect Health Care, and a doctor in the Midwest, said that while it is easy for anyone to unwittingly share false information, there should be a way to stop harmful information ā€” especially in the middle of a deadly outbreak.