On this episode of the Gap, Tammy and Althea talk with traveling nurse Anne about a work experience she had at the very beginning of the coronavirus pandemic. Anne was fired for refusing to downgrade from an N95 mask to a surgical mask in accordance with CDC guidelines (which were changed shortly thereafter). We explore how that has changed her views of the nursing profession and of the medical field as a whole.
Then, we talk a bit about the presidential debate that happened this week. While we weren't surprised with the outing, we would tend to agree with Jake Tapper from CNN, who called it a "hot mess wrapped in a dumpster fire, wrapped in a trainwreck."
Finally, we learn about some newsroom best practices for debunking rumors and conspiracy theories and consider how they might factor in to our own lives. There are a lot of potentially fraught political conversations to be had in the next month, so here are some tips.
- Focus on the facts, and avoid repeating the falsehood if you don't need to
- Make debunks easy to process -- short, simple and sweet.
- Avoid ridicule. Frame debunks in a way that is less threatening to a person's worldview.
- Try to answer questions that the debunk might surface, like if X isn't true, why do people believe it?
Plus, your calls!