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Health misinformation crops up in everyday decision-making, and it’s reshaping our trust in medicine.
In Episode 3 of Sick Society, Dr. Alexis Paton and Sir Andrew Goddard are joined by Tim Caulfield, a leading researcher on health misinformation and science communication, to examine why today’s misinformation landscape feels harder to challenge than ever before, and why simply “correcting the facts” no longer works.
As Tim puts it, we’re moving from fact-speaking to belief-speaking, where shared identity and emotion matter more than evidence alone.
In this conversation, you’ll hear:
Sick Society explores how culture, power, technology, and policy shape health long before anyone enters a clinic.
🎧 A podcast by Haunted Mouse Productions
About our guest
Tim Caulfield is a professor of health law and science policy at the University of Alberta and a leading researcher studying how misinformation shapes public trust, behaviour, and policy. Drawing on decades of research, he explains why today’s misinformation environment is fundamentally different — and how social media, political identity, wellness culture, and now AI accelerate the problem.
By Haunted Mouse ProductionsHealth misinformation crops up in everyday decision-making, and it’s reshaping our trust in medicine.
In Episode 3 of Sick Society, Dr. Alexis Paton and Sir Andrew Goddard are joined by Tim Caulfield, a leading researcher on health misinformation and science communication, to examine why today’s misinformation landscape feels harder to challenge than ever before, and why simply “correcting the facts” no longer works.
As Tim puts it, we’re moving from fact-speaking to belief-speaking, where shared identity and emotion matter more than evidence alone.
In this conversation, you’ll hear:
Sick Society explores how culture, power, technology, and policy shape health long before anyone enters a clinic.
🎧 A podcast by Haunted Mouse Productions
About our guest
Tim Caulfield is a professor of health law and science policy at the University of Alberta and a leading researcher studying how misinformation shapes public trust, behaviour, and policy. Drawing on decades of research, he explains why today’s misinformation environment is fundamentally different — and how social media, political identity, wellness culture, and now AI accelerate the problem.