Article 6TEJ2 Are you falling for wellness misinformation online? Here’s how to tell

Are you falling for wellness misinformation online? Here’s how to tell

by
Adrienne Matei
from Science | The Guardian on (#6TEJ2)

Social media is rife with alarming advice and warnings - experts share red flags to avoid

Wellness advice abounds on social media: warnings about toxic foods", assertions that parasites are driving your sugar cravings, or claims about solving the root cause" of bodily complaints with unproven remedies.

Wellness woo" appears in many domains, like nutrition, dermatology, parenting and psychology, says Dr Jonathan Stea, clinical psychologist and author of a new book about mental health misinformation, Mind the Science. Common themes include distrust in mainstream medicine, the flawed belief that natural" is always best, and an overreliance on anecdotal evidence - for instance, I believe smearing beef tallow on my face cured my acne, so it will also cure yours!"

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