Cancer patients in PH falling for alternative ‘cures’
Filipino single mother Mary Ann Eduarte delayed chemotherapy for her breast cancer for several years and instead took food supplements falsely promoted on social media as cures for the deadly disease.
They didn’t work and the cancer spread to her lungs and bones.
Eduarte is one of many Filipinos duped by medical misinformation flooding social media platforms, where they rank among the world’s heaviest users.
A shortage of doctors, the difficulty of reaching a hospital in the archipelago, poor health literacy, and fear of incurring huge medical bills have led many people suffering from chronic conditions to seek alternative treatments online.
Article continues after this advertisementIn recent years, Agence France-Presse (AFP) digital investigation journalists have seen an explosion in the volume of posts and paid advertisements promoting unproven treatments for diseases, such as cancer.
Article continues after this advertisementThe trend was fueled by the COVID-19 pandemic, when healthcare systems were overwhelmed and many were too scared to visit a hospital.
Eduarte, 47, who makes a living selling beauty products online, found a lump in her right breast during a self-check in 2014.
She was advised to have a biopsy to find out if it was cancer, but she was scared and delayed having the procedure for two years.
‘Testimonials’
Instead, she spent about P50,000 ($900) a month on food supplements, including drinks made from tropical fruit and barley grass that she had seen advertised as cancer cures on Facebook and YouTube.
She finally agreed to have the biopsy in 2016, which confirmed the tumor was malignant.
But she refused chemotherapy, fearing it would make her sick and lose her hair, and continued taking the supplements for another three years.
“I really believed they would destroy my cancer cells because that’s what I was being told by their marketing,” Eduarte told AFP at her home near Manila.
“They were posting testimonials that said people were being cured.”
After her cancer metastasized, Eduarte agreed to chemotherapy.
“I made the wrong decision,” she admitted.
“Those food supplements actually cost me more than if I had immediately sought standard medical treatment.”
‘Out-of-pocket expenses’
Madonna Realuyo, an oncologist at the Bicol Regional Hospital and Medical Center in central Philippines, said online misinformation about cancer treatment was a “serious problem.”
“Five out of 10 patients I see ask me about something they have seen or read on the internet—90 percent of the time the information is incorrect,” Realuyo said.
“Telling them the correct information does not guarantee that they will listen to us or believe us.”
The cost of cancer treatment, which can reach millions of pesos, made patients vulnerable to deceptive marketing of unproven products that are supposedly cheaper.
“Once you’re diagnosed with cancer, the reality is that there’s a lot of out-of-pocket expenses,” said Aileen Antolin of the Philippine Foundation for Breast Cancer.
AFP has a global team of journalists who debunk misinformation as part of the third-party fact-checking program of Meta, the parent company of Facebook.
Fact-checkers from around 90 organizations, including media outlets, check posts on Facebook, WhatsApp, and Instagram.
AFP has repeatedly debunked posts on Facebook that have falsely promoted products as natural cures for cancer, including “Doc Atoie’s Finest Guyabano Wine,” which was one of the products used by Eduarte.
Misinformation
The drink was featured in hundreds of posts that were shared on Facebook pages with tens, even hundreds, of thousands of followers.
The Food and Drug Administration (FDA) told AFP it was not able to go after companies or individuals falsely promoting products online because it still doesn’t have guidelines for implementing a section of the 2009 law that established the agency.
Instead, it issues warnings on its website and social media pages.
“Our powers are limited,” FDA lawyer Pamela Sevilla told AFP.
Meta’s ad policy prohibits any “promises or suggestions of unrealistic outcomes” for “health, weight loss or economic opportunity.”
It says ads for over-the-counter medicines should comply with licenses and approvals required by local laws.
These ads can be removed from the platform once flagged, while posts that do not directly violate Meta’s community standards but are rated as false by third-party fact-checkers like AFP are labeled as misinformation and demoted so they are less likely to appear in newsfeeds.
But when AFP checked Meta’s ad library it found ads for “Doc Atoie’s Finest Guyabano Wine” and some other products debunked by AFP still there.
Silenced by lawsuits
The barrage of medical misinformation during the pandemic prompted Melbourne-based doctor Adam Smith, who speaks Tagalog, to make YouTube videos identifying misleading ads or posts.
“I realized a huge number of people in the population believed they could treat their medical illness with supplements and vitamins, which was crazy to me,” Smith told AFP via Zoom.
But he quit after being hit with several lawsuits by the companies whose products he was exposing.
“These companies and individuals are very happy to use the Philippine justice system to silence free speech and to silence any criticism,” Smith said.
After surviving cancer, Eduarte said she was now on a mission to educate others about the dangers of online misinformation.
“I’m telling you, having taken those food supplements, … they really did nothing to cure my illness,” she said. —AFP
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