Skip to main content
About
Home
Forum
Groups
Group details
Groups-Private
Maps
Links
FAQs
Resources
Resource items
Resource nodes
HIFI
Systems
User login
Username
*
Password
*
Create new account
Request new password
lake
What is the weather on the sun
Search form
Search
Language
Anonymous's groups in this site
User is not a member of any group.
Your groups across all your sites
User is not a member of any group.
Recent Content
Recent flooding in Maryland showes the need for stronger resilience planning
U.S. FDA advisors recommend vaccine manufacturers target strains related to JN.1 variant.
U.S. CDC reports multiple cases of new COVID variant linked to surge in China
RFK Jr's U.S. health report report targets food, drug, tech industries: Key takeaways
Global health bodies team up to counter U-S. led funding crisis; China pledges $500M to WHO
Recent Comments
The universal flu vaccine project puzzles vaccine experts
1 week 2 days ago
New uncertainty into approval of new COVID boosters
3 weeks 2 days ago
HHS top spokesman resigns in dispute with RFK Jr.over measles
2 months 2 weeks ago
The terminated grants include those countering HIV, Maleria
2 months 3 weeks ago
Who's online
There are currently 0 users online.
You are here
Home
Misinformation issue: how to help counter it--study
Primary tabs
View
(active tab)
Workflow
Fri, 2025-03-14 10:59 —
mike kraft
This psychological ‘booster’ could help people resist misinformation, a new study finds | CNN
Misinformation is everywhere, and it can be hard to detect false claims. But consistent training could help people avoid fake news traps, new research shows.
Julianna Bragg
CNN
Country / Region Tags:
Global
UK - London
United Kingdom
United States
General Topic Tags:
Public Attitudes
Public Health
Research
Communication
Problem, Solution, SitRep, or ?:
Analysis
Groups this Group Post belongs to:
Global Health
Medical - global
- Private group -
Log in
or
register
to post comments
howdy folks
Page loaded in 0.425 seconds.
Recent Comments