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University of Nebraska Medical Center

WHO Partners With TikTok to Tackle Misinformation

Practice Business WHO says the collaboration reflects its commitment to promoting global health literacy by leveraging various digital communications technologies. With around one in four young people receiving their news via social media, senior WHO figures want to combat the increasingly prominent issue of misinformation.

With the platform reportedly reaching more than one billion people around the globe, the organisation is stepping up its efforts to positively impact people’s wellbeing. It will do this by:

  • Breaking stigmas
  • Sharing impactful stories
  • Providing resources
  • Building strong communities

The collaboration is specifically with WHO’s Fides network, which is a variety of healthcare influencers helping share health content that pushes back against misinformation. The network, which launched in 2020, spans 800 creators and reaches 150 million people.

Canadian study, which included experts from the University of Bristol, concluded that misinformation has led to loss of public trust, delayed action on climate change as well as measurable loss of life and significant financial toll during the Covid-19 pandemic.

Canadian academic and former senior civil servant, Professor Alex Himelfarb, has previously described misinformation as a “defining issue of our time”, which has ultimately become a global problem.

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