The term infodemic ( a blend of information
and epidemic) is not very new. However, it has become popular lately,
with the spread of Covid-19 related news. The Cambridge dictionary has
incorporated it.
The Merriam-Webster editors commented last spring that they were
“watching” this word although it had not yet entered their dictionary. In fact,
almost a year later, a search for it in Merriam-Webster still produces no
result. Where it is discussed, here is how they define it: “a rapid and
far-reaching spread of both accurate and inaccurate information about
something, such as a disease. As facts, rumors, and fears mix and disperse, it
becomes difficult to learn essential information about an issue” (“Words
We’re Watching: Infodemic”).
According to Merriam-Webster, the term was coined by Washington
Post journalist David Rothkopf in relation to SARS back in 2003:
What exactly do I mean by the
"infodemic"? A few facts, mixed with fear, speculation and
rumor, amplified and relayed swiftly worldwide by modern information
technologies, have affected national and international economies, politics and
even security in ways that are utterly disproportionate with the root
realities. It is a phenomenon we have seen with greater frequency in recent
years—not only in our reaction to SARS, for example, but also in our response
to terrorism and even to relatively minor occurrences such as shark sightings.
David Rothkopf, The Washington Post, 11 May 2003
Last spring, the World Health Organization warned about
misinformation and disinformation surrounding Covid-19 in “Let’s
Flatten the Infodemic Curve”. The site encourages information literacy,
from checking sources, authors, and dates, to examining evidence and biases. More
recently, The Guardian newspaper published an opinion piece by Oxford
Professor Melinda Mills entitled “We
Must Prevent a Vaccine 'Infodemic' from Fuelling the Covid Pandemic”. Mills
fears that researchers’ work on the vaccines will be wasted if anti-vaccination
campaigners’ misinformation is not counteracted using effective communication
with the public, including local dialogue rather than one-way information-heavy
communications.
Similarly, the World Economic Forum is concerned: “There's
No Vaccine for the Infodemic - So How Can We Combat the Virus of Misinformation?”.
Information literacy is the key, as opposed to – for example - “plandemic”
conspiracy theories.