Teaching learners to identify and reduce the spread of medical misinformation

Pharmacists play a key role in helping to identify and combat the spread of medical misinformation. To do this effectively, pharmacists need to be equipped with skills and tools to respond to medical misinformation as it relates to patient care. The lack of peer‐reviewed research on how to approach...

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Veröffentlicht in:JAACP : Journal of the American College of Clinical Pharmacy 2024-09, Vol.7 (9), p.926-940
Hauptverfasser: Johnson, Steven Theodore, Goldwire, Micheline Andel, Abdalla, Maha, Advani, Ashish, Alhammad, Abdullah M., Anderson, Keri C., Bernknopf, Allison, Blommel, Matthew L., Brunner, Rachel, Frazier, JorDonna, Gor, Prit, Gosser, Rena, Ipema, Heather, Kier, Karen L., Kostrzewa, Audrey, Majerczyk, Daniel, Manian, Radha, Maxwell, Erin, May, Dianne, May, J. Russell, Munir, Faria, Okafar, Ife, Phillips, Jennifer, Poore, Alia A., Saad, Maha, Sibbesen, Julie B., Sommer, Christine D.
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Pharmacists play a key role in helping to identify and combat the spread of medical misinformation. To do this effectively, pharmacists need to be equipped with skills and tools to respond to medical misinformation as it relates to patient care. The lack of peer‐reviewed research on how to approach medical misinformation illustrates the need for specific strategies on how to identify, combat, and report medical misinformation. This article describes practical tactics pharmacists can use to teach learners the knowledge and skills necessary to reduce the spread of medical misinformation from various sources, including social media and artificial intelligence.
ISSN:2574-9870
2574-9870
DOI:10.1002/jac5.2014