#Publichealth folks also can’t simply ‘scroll past it’ as some have stated. It’s all of our duty, in public health, to make sure the accurate and correct info is shared and incorrect info is pointed out and corrected.
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Sending inappropriate DMs and threatening emails to critics is unacceptable and, frankly, creepy. Yes I’ve seen them, as well. Not aimed at me, but aimed at friends and colleagues. You, alone, control your content and are responsible for it, and the response. 3/3
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P.S. If you’ve had to erase fistsful of twitter threads after being corrected, maybe this isn’t your area of expertise and maybe you should be more responsible about not hitting ‘send’ in the middle of a global pandemic when people are rightfully scared and looking for guidance.
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It might be cheese rather than tea.
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You talking about the Harvard epidemiologist right? He blocked you or something?
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I still owe you a list of great
#COVID19 follows (apologies as I will def leave someone out, please add)@nataliexdean@SaskiaPopescu@DoctorYasmin@angie_rasmussen@maiamajumder@KindrachukJason@ASlavitt@EpiEllie@CT_Bergstrom@BillHanage@michaelmina_lab@aetiology - Show replies
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People are calling the vigorous correcting of misinformation an example of cancel culture? Goodness gracious. Ignore the cretins & keep up the good work.
Thanks. Twitter will use this to make your timeline better. UndoUndo
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