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HIV Denial in the Internet EraDepartment of Epidemiology, University of Iowa College of Public Health (Smith); Department of Neurology,Yale University School of Medicine ()Novella) SummaryThis study discuses the impact of the AIDS denial movement, which is spearheaded by a group that is reported to refuse to accept that HIV is the cause of AIDS. According to the authors, "HIV denial has taken root in the general population and has shown its potential to frustrate public education efforts and adversely affect public funding for AIDS research and prevention programs....Indeed, the Internet has served as a fertile and un-refereed medium to spread these denialist beliefs....The Internet is an effective tool for targeting young people, and for spreading misinformation within a group at high risk for HIV infection." The authors discuss denialist groups, conspiracy theories and selective distrust of scientific authority, efforts to discredit scientific work related to HIV/AIDS, denialist claims of expert backing for their theories, and the denialist strategy of demanding more evidence than can be provided. ContactTara C. Smith
SourcePlaced on the Communication Initiative site June 20 2008 Last Updated June 24 2008 |
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