Ethics of a pandemic of deliberate health misinformation: From abortion care to vaccines

IF 16.4 1区 化学 Q1 CHEMISTRY, MULTIDISCIPLINARY Accounts of Chemical Research Pub Date : 2024-01-13 DOI:10.1111/bioe.13268
Udo Schuklenk
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And don't get me started on the massive amount of antivaccine misinformation disseminated successfully during the COVID-19 pandemic.2</p><p>What is oftentimes overlooked is that efforts at manipulating vulnerable populations into acting in particular ways that may not be in their best interest, has a history going back much longer. Arguably the internet turbocharged some of these efforts, but this has been happening for a long time.</p><p>A case in point is brick-and-mortar “pregnancy crisis centers.” They exist in many countries, including, for instance the United States and Canada, today. The American College of Obstetrics and Gynecology, in a fact sheet, notes that they typically target marginalized and vulnerable populations, in particular “people of color, young people, and under-resourced people who are struggling to afford an abortion.”3 Their objective, invariably, to manipulate a pregnant woman considering having an abortion into not having one. Laypeople with no relevant professional expertise masquerade, oftentimes for good measure in white coats, as counselors when really their agenda is manipulation. A litany of misinformation is typically provided to the information-seeking pregnant women. In jurisdictions where there are time limits on abortion, efforts are made to ensure pregnant women miss the window during which they can legally access an abortion, and the list of misconduct goes on.</p><p>Sometimes healthcare professionals serve on the boards of directors of such establishments, but usually—there are exceptions—they themselves do not directly engage in the spreading of misinformation. Instead pregnant women seeking unbiased information will be seen by “trained advocates,” as the Chequamegon Pregnancy Center in Wisconsin puts it so deceptively. The Pregnancy Center in Sanford's Florida meanwhile provides on its website misleading information on the morning-after pill, despite the known safety profile of the pill having led to its availability as over-the-counter medication across the European Union member-states.4 Images of medical equipment and machinery feature prominently on the photos of many of these centers. Anyone can buy them, after all.</p><p>What is interesting is that arguments invoking the ethical and fiduciary obligations of professionals, vis-a-vis their patients do not apply here, precisely because these establishments deliberately mislead their clients or customers into thinking that they are professional healthcare facilities, when they are nothing of that sort. While the pregnant woman might consider herself a patient, for all intent and purposes she is not. No formal fiduciary healthcare professional–patient relationship was ever entered into.</p><p>That does not mean that other ethical arguments do not apply here. For starters, clearly, the provision of information that is misleading and manipulative is unethical, because it prevents people from making autonomous choices. It is also harmful if it manipulates pregnant women into missing abortion-related timelines that prevent them from having an abortion, because they eventually are so far down the track of their pregnancy that legally they cannot access an abortion.</p><p>People visiting these establishments for advice may be further misled by placing trust in these organizations because they oftentimes are registered charities. Charities are oftentimes mistakenly assumed to serve uncontroversially the public good, but clearly that isn't quite the case here. Interestingly, having clicked the “donate” button on some of these make-believe health clinics' websites, I was quickly taken to a registered religious charity, so at that point it is clear that one isn't actually supporting a clinic, but the religiously motivated deception of vulnerable people in a make-believe clinic setting.</p><p>Pretending to be a clinic when one is patently not is in its own right quite eye-opening, because it demonstrates how far religious extremists are willing to go in their quest to shape the world according to their religious beliefs.</p><p>The question arises, of course, how societies should approach the regulation of these establishments. Unsurprisingly, the proprietors of these nonclinic clinics will be quick to make religious freedom claims to justify their right to exist. Remarkably, U.S. federal courts apparently decided that because these establishments provide such misleading information free of charge, “the government can neither compel disclosures to correct false and misleading information about the services offered by these clinics nor regulate any false or misleading advertisements made by the clinics.”5 This strikes me, a nonlawyer, as implausible. It seems to me that the relationship the clients entered into with these establishments were based on false representations about who they are to begin with, regardless of whether the misinformation was free or charged for. How can the determining factor be whether the service was charged for or not, when it led to demonstrable harm? It is difficult to find a suitable term to describe the victims of these establishments. Clearly, they are not patients. Are they consumers of a kind or clients? I have great difficulty accepting those labels either, given that the relationship is based on deceptive activities. These women would—likely—not have consented to ultrasound and counseling activities had they understood that they were not in a proper healthcare facility. Whatever consent was given under false assumptions about the nature of these establishments surely is null and void. 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Abstract

Much has been written about the decline of legacy publishing models like newspapers. Much has also been written about the parallel rise of misinformation disseminated on internet platforms like X, TikTok, Instagram, and others. For someone belonging to an older generation, it is stunning to see that a convicted child abuser like Ruby Franke, who gave child education advice to parents on her popular YouTube channel, managed to attract 2.5 million followers. She pleaded guilty to torturing her kids.1 Clearly, many internet netizens of the postnewspaper era are not the most discerning of audience members. And don't get me started on the massive amount of antivaccine misinformation disseminated successfully during the COVID-19 pandemic.2

What is oftentimes overlooked is that efforts at manipulating vulnerable populations into acting in particular ways that may not be in their best interest, has a history going back much longer. Arguably the internet turbocharged some of these efforts, but this has been happening for a long time.

A case in point is brick-and-mortar “pregnancy crisis centers.” They exist in many countries, including, for instance the United States and Canada, today. The American College of Obstetrics and Gynecology, in a fact sheet, notes that they typically target marginalized and vulnerable populations, in particular “people of color, young people, and under-resourced people who are struggling to afford an abortion.”3 Their objective, invariably, to manipulate a pregnant woman considering having an abortion into not having one. Laypeople with no relevant professional expertise masquerade, oftentimes for good measure in white coats, as counselors when really their agenda is manipulation. A litany of misinformation is typically provided to the information-seeking pregnant women. In jurisdictions where there are time limits on abortion, efforts are made to ensure pregnant women miss the window during which they can legally access an abortion, and the list of misconduct goes on.

Sometimes healthcare professionals serve on the boards of directors of such establishments, but usually—there are exceptions—they themselves do not directly engage in the spreading of misinformation. Instead pregnant women seeking unbiased information will be seen by “trained advocates,” as the Chequamegon Pregnancy Center in Wisconsin puts it so deceptively. The Pregnancy Center in Sanford's Florida meanwhile provides on its website misleading information on the morning-after pill, despite the known safety profile of the pill having led to its availability as over-the-counter medication across the European Union member-states.4 Images of medical equipment and machinery feature prominently on the photos of many of these centers. Anyone can buy them, after all.

What is interesting is that arguments invoking the ethical and fiduciary obligations of professionals, vis-a-vis their patients do not apply here, precisely because these establishments deliberately mislead their clients or customers into thinking that they are professional healthcare facilities, when they are nothing of that sort. While the pregnant woman might consider herself a patient, for all intent and purposes she is not. No formal fiduciary healthcare professional–patient relationship was ever entered into.

That does not mean that other ethical arguments do not apply here. For starters, clearly, the provision of information that is misleading and manipulative is unethical, because it prevents people from making autonomous choices. It is also harmful if it manipulates pregnant women into missing abortion-related timelines that prevent them from having an abortion, because they eventually are so far down the track of their pregnancy that legally they cannot access an abortion.

People visiting these establishments for advice may be further misled by placing trust in these organizations because they oftentimes are registered charities. Charities are oftentimes mistakenly assumed to serve uncontroversially the public good, but clearly that isn't quite the case here. Interestingly, having clicked the “donate” button on some of these make-believe health clinics' websites, I was quickly taken to a registered religious charity, so at that point it is clear that one isn't actually supporting a clinic, but the religiously motivated deception of vulnerable people in a make-believe clinic setting.

Pretending to be a clinic when one is patently not is in its own right quite eye-opening, because it demonstrates how far religious extremists are willing to go in their quest to shape the world according to their religious beliefs.

The question arises, of course, how societies should approach the regulation of these establishments. Unsurprisingly, the proprietors of these nonclinic clinics will be quick to make religious freedom claims to justify their right to exist. Remarkably, U.S. federal courts apparently decided that because these establishments provide such misleading information free of charge, “the government can neither compel disclosures to correct false and misleading information about the services offered by these clinics nor regulate any false or misleading advertisements made by the clinics.”5 This strikes me, a nonlawyer, as implausible. It seems to me that the relationship the clients entered into with these establishments were based on false representations about who they are to begin with, regardless of whether the misinformation was free or charged for. How can the determining factor be whether the service was charged for or not, when it led to demonstrable harm? It is difficult to find a suitable term to describe the victims of these establishments. Clearly, they are not patients. Are they consumers of a kind or clients? I have great difficulty accepting those labels either, given that the relationship is based on deceptive activities. These women would—likely—not have consented to ultrasound and counseling activities had they understood that they were not in a proper healthcare facility. Whatever consent was given under false assumptions about the nature of these establishments surely is null and void. Anyone acting on that information who suffers harmful consequences—such as being unable to terminate an unwanted pregnancy—should be able to receive some form of compensation from whoever maneuvered them into that outcome.

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蓄意制造健康误导的伦理大流行:从流产护理到疫苗
关于报纸等传统出版模式的衰落,已经有很多论述。关于在 X、TikTok、Instagram 等互联网平台上传播的错误信息的同时兴起,也有很多报道。对于老一辈人来说,像鲁比-弗兰科(Ruby Franke)这样被定罪的虐待儿童者在其流行的 YouTube 频道上为父母提供儿童教育建议,却能吸引 250 万粉丝,实在令人震惊。1 显然,后报纸时代的许多互联网网民并不是最有辨别力的受众。别让我再提 COVID-19 大流行期间成功传播的大量反疫苗错误信息了。2 人们经常忽视的是,操纵弱势群体采取可能不符合其最佳利益的特定行动的历史可以追溯到更久远的年代。实体 "怀孕危机中心 "就是一个很好的例子。如今,许多国家都有这样的中心,比如美国和加拿大。美国妇产科学院在一份概况介绍中指出,它们通常以边缘化和弱势群体为目标,尤其是 "有色人种、年轻人和资源不足、难以负担堕胎费用的人"。没有相关专业知识的非专业人员伪装成咨询师,有时还穿上白大褂,但实际上他们的目的是操纵。他们通常会向寻求信息的孕妇提供一连串的错误信息。在对堕胎有时间限制的司法管辖区,他们会努力确保孕妇错过可以合法堕胎的时间窗口,不法行为不胜枚举。有时,医疗保健专业人员会担任此类机构的董事会成员,但通常情况下--也有例外--他们本身并不直接参与传播错误信息。相反,寻求公正信息的孕妇会得到 "训练有素的倡导者 "的帮助,威斯康星州的切夸梅贡怀孕中心(Chequamegon Pregnancy Center)就是这样欺骗性地说的。与此同时,佛罗里达州桑福德的怀孕中心在其网站上提供了关于事后避孕药的误导性信息,尽管众所周知,事后避孕药的安全性已导致其在欧盟各成员国作为非处方药出售。有趣的是,援引专业人士对病人的道德和信托义务的论点在这里并不适用,这正是因为 这些机构故意误导客户或顾客,让他们以为自己是专业的医疗机构,而实际上根本不是。虽然孕妇可能认为自己是病人,但就所有意图和目的而言,她都不是病人。这并不意味着其他道德论点在此不适用。首先,提供具有误导性和操纵性的信息显然是不道德的,因为这会妨碍人们做出自主选择。如果它操纵孕妇错过与堕胎有关的时限,使她们无法进行堕胎,这也是有害的,因为她们最终会因为怀孕时间过长而无法进行堕胎。慈善机构常常被误认为是为公众利益服务的,这一点无可争议,但这里的情况显然并非如此。有趣的是,当我点击了一些虚假健康诊所网站上的 "捐赠 "按钮后,很快就被带到了一个注册的宗教慈善机构,所以此时很明显,人们实际上并不是在支持一个诊所,而是在一个虚假的诊所环境中出于宗教动机欺骗弱势人群。伪装成诊所而实际上并不是,这本身就令人大开眼界,因为它表明了宗教极端分子为了按照自己的宗教信仰塑造世界而不择手段的程度。不出所料,这些非诊所的经营者很快就会提出宗教自由的主张,为自己的生存权辩护。值得注意的是,美国 联邦法院显然决定,由于这些机构免费提供这些误导性信息,"政府既不能强制要求披露这些诊所所提供服务的虚假和误导性信息,也不能监管这些诊所所做的任何虚假或误导性广告 "5 。在我看来,客户与这些机构建立的关系一开始就基于对其身份的虚假陈述,无论这些错误信息是免费的还是收费的。在服务导致明显伤害的情况下,怎么能以是否收费作为决定因素呢?很难找到一个合适的词来形容这些机构的受害者。显然,他们不是病人。他们是消费者还是客户?鉴于这种关系是建立在欺骗活动的基础上,我也很难接受这些标签。如果这些妇女知道她们不是在正规的医疗机构,她们很可能不会同意接受超声波检查和咨询活动。在对这些机构性质的错误假设下做出的任何同意肯定都是无效的。任何根据这些信息行事的人,如果遭受了有害后果--比如无法终止意外怀孕--都应该能够从操纵她们造成这种结果的人那里获得某种形式的赔偿。
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来源期刊
Accounts of Chemical Research
Accounts of Chemical Research 化学-化学综合
CiteScore
31.40
自引率
1.10%
发文量
312
审稿时长
2 months
期刊介绍: Accounts of Chemical Research presents short, concise and critical articles offering easy-to-read overviews of basic research and applications in all areas of chemistry and biochemistry. These short reviews focus on research from the author’s own laboratory and are designed to teach the reader about a research project. In addition, Accounts of Chemical Research publishes commentaries that give an informed opinion on a current research problem. Special Issues online are devoted to a single topic of unusual activity and significance. Accounts of Chemical Research replaces the traditional article abstract with an article "Conspectus." These entries synopsize the research affording the reader a closer look at the content and significance of an article. Through this provision of a more detailed description of the article contents, the Conspectus enhances the article's discoverability by search engines and the exposure for the research.
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