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Overall, they found that COVID-19 conspiracy theories are not only commonplace, they’re gaining traction. adults-first in late March, and then again in mid-July-to determine how Americans’ beliefs and actions regarding the pandemic changed over time. In a University of Pennsylvania Annenberg Public Policy Center study published Monday in Social Science & Medicine, researchers surveyed a group of 840 U.S. The result: many Americans now believe pandemic-related conspiracy theories-and, alarmingly, those same people are less likely to take steps to prevent the virus from spreading. While modern science offers a better understanding of how diseases infect people and how to contain them, COVID-19 conspiracy theories are spreading rapidly via social media, unreliable news outlets and from our own political leaders, including U.S. Public health crises have spawned conspiracy theories as far back as when the Black Death ravaged Europe in the 1300s, as people desperately try to make sense of the chaotic forces disrupting their lives.
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