Did an Ebola Vaccine Only Work on White People?
A “satirical” blog’s 2014 post spread both in the U.S. and abroad.
A “satirical” blog’s 2014 post spread both in the U.S. and abroad.
Rumors that Ebola was spreading in the U.S. and that a second patient had been diagnosed with Ebola swept the Internet after Thomas Duncan, the first person to contract Ebola in the U.S., died on October 8, 2014.
A home remedy tip that says using egg whites on burns will produce positive results because they contain collagen, a substance used for treating burns.
A forwarded email compares the rate of accidental deaths between physicians and gun owners and concludes that the rate of accidental deaths per physician is much higher than the rate of accidental deaths per gun owner.
A 2014 outbreak offered a glimpse of how disinformation would be weaponized around other diseases.
A video from the CBN television network reports on a Florida physician who is promoting the use of pure coconut oil as possible treatment for Alzheimer’s symptoms. She tells the story of helping her own husband overcome some Alzheimer’s symptoms.
This is a forwarded email alleging that the oil from marijuana will cure cancer.
This is a comparison of hospitals, schools and charities run by the Catholic church and Islam.
There are allegations flying on the World Wide Web that the California GOP has created a fake health care website to discourage constituents from obtaining insurance.
There is an audio file from a segment of the Mark Levin radio show that is circulating the Internet. It contains a conversation between the Mark Levin and a caller named Jeff from Chicago, Il, who identified himself as a brain surgeon. The caller said that he had just returned from Washington DC and read over a document that said that patients are referred to as “units” and anyone over the age of 70 who subscribe to government medical insurance and needs stroke therapy or treatment for an aneurism will be given comfort care. comfort care.