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						 NEW YORK--  March 17, 2022 --  A new survey from Sermo, a physician-first online  community and leader in global HCP insights, found that physicians are  facing a challenging onslaught of COVID-19 vaccine and treatment  misinformation as reported by 3,600+ doctors around the world.  
 
81% of physicians reported feeling that social media misinformation  has caused an existential crisis in their profession. More than half  (54%) of physicians surveyed reported that a patient has asked them for  an unapproved COVID-19 treatment such as Ivermectin and  Hydroxychloroquine. Also, more than half (55%) of physicians reported  that COVID-19 vaccine misinformation is increasingly becoming an issue  when meeting with patients.  
 
Physicians are being bombarded with a variety of COVID-19 vaccine  misinformation. The most common misinformation they are hearing from  patients is that vaccine safety and effectiveness cannot be trusted  because researchers rushed the development of the vaccine, reported by  60% of physicians.  
 
Other types of misinformation heard by physicians from patients include:  
 
· More than half (51%) of physicians reported hearing from patients  that they don’t need a COVID-19 vaccine if they’ve already had Covid.  
· Misinformation about vaccines modifying your DNA continues to prevail. 45% of physicians reported hearing this from patients.  
· Conspiracy theories about microchips in vaccines have made their  way to the doctor’s office as 29% of physicians reported hearing this  from patients.  
· 1 in 5 (20%) physicians reported hearing from patients that the COVID-19 vaccine gives you COVID-19.  
· One-third of physicians (34%) reported hearing from patients that  vaccines cause infertility. Physicians feel that vaccine hesitancy among  pregnant women persists. 61% of physicians reported that pregnant  patients are reluctant to get the vaccine.  
· COVID-19 vaccine hesitancy is spilling over to other vaccines. 52%  of surveyed physicians feel patients who have been hesitant to get  COVID-19 vaccines will stop getting other vaccines.  
 
“It’s clear from when we first launched the COVID-19 barometer at  the start of the pandemic that misinformation is increasingly posing  huge challenges to physicians when treating patients. Physicians feel  like they are battling an infodemic that is threatening public health,”  says Peter Kirk, Sermo CEO. “The barometer results clearly paint a  picture that misinformation is showing up at appointments across the  U.S. and the globe at a very local level.”  
 
In addition to battling COVID-19 misinformation, surveyed physicians  continue to report they are seeing a significant amount of reluctance  among parents to get their kids vaccinated. 61% of physicians reported  seeing patients more reluctant to vaccinate their children than  themselves. Lack of long-term vaccine safety data in children (45%) was  the leading reason physicians believed parents were reluctant to  vaccinate their children. This is an increase from a previous Barometer  survey fielded in November 2021 when 38% of physicians believed that  lack of long-term vaccine safety data was keeping parents from  vaccinating their children. 1 in 4 (23%) physicians believed that  adverse effects and allergic reactions were a reason that parents  weren’t vaccinating their children.  
 
This survey was fielded as part 22 of Sermo’s COVID-19 Barometer and  included more than 3,600 physician respondents between March 2 - March  3, 2022. To find out more about the findings of Sermo’s latest COVID-19  Real Time Barometer, visit app.sermo.com/covid19-barometer. 
						
						
						
						 						
                                                              
						
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