Facebook is
aggressively being used by anti-vaccination advocates to target pregnant women
with sponsored advertisements to spread false information and conspiracy
theories as the US battles a climbing measles outbreak.
A sponsored
ad found by Quartz journalist Jeremy Merrill shows the anti-vaccination
organisation Stop Mandatory Vaccination targeting women ages 20 to 60 who have
expressed interest in pregnancy living in the state of Washington – where the
governor recently declared a state of emergency over the measles outbreak.
Nearly 50
children and young adults in Clark County, Washington have become sickened by
the disease since January.
According to
the CDC, there have been over 100 instances of measles since January – more
than the entire year of 2016, when there were only 86. So far, nearly every
child who has gotten ill is un-vaccinated.
Facebook lets anti-vaxxers target ads specifically at women who are 'interested in pregnancy'.— Jeremy B. Merrill (@jeremybmerrill) February 14, 2019
(But Facebook refuses to put that targeting information into its public database.)
great find by @lachlan https://t.co/7swRhWc7AY pic.twitter.com/vnvsxNWVrw
In the
sponsored ad by Stop Mandatory Vaccinations, which has over 100,000 likes on
Facebook, it said a woman's daughter died "12 hours after being injected
by eight vaccines in 2008."
Vaccination
rates have plummeted in pockets of the Pacific Northwest in recent years, as
lies about the dangers of vaccines have spread, despite the fact that the
measles vaccine is safe for almost everyone and can prevent many debilitating
illnesses and death.
Facebook
sent Business Insider the following statement:
"We are
committed to accurate and useful information throughout Facebook. We remove
content that violates our Community Standards, downrank articles that might be
misleading, and show third-party fact-checker articles to provide people with
more context. We have more to do, and will continue efforts to provide
educational information on important topics like health."
Read more here.
Comments
Post a Comment