![]() ![]() Keep us aware of suspicious Facebook pages, groups, accounts, websites, articles, or photos in your network by contacting us at Let us battle disinformation one Fact Check at a time. Rappler has fact-checked another Facebook page by Agno, “Lynn Channel,” multiple times before. An expert interviewed by BBC’s Reality Check section said people could also be using other adhesives such as band-aid residue to keep the magnets in place. Several international news and fact-checking organizations have also said the viral challenge does not provide evidence of a magnetic reaction.īritish fact-checking company Full Fact said it’s more likely the magnets are sticking due to moisture on the skin’s surface. The AstraZeneca and Sputnik V vaccines contain safe amounts of magnesium. Physicists and medical experts have said that, even if vaccine formulations contained magnetic metals, vaccine doses are too small and therefore not strong enough to cause magnetic reaction. The video has over 2,100 likes and 3,700 shares, as of writing.Īmong the COVID-19 vaccines approved in the Philippines, only two vaccines contain traces of magnetic metals. In her video, Agno also misleadingly cited a 2016 article from The Guardian, entitled “ Genetically engineered ‘Magneto’ protein remotely controls brain and behaviour” to support her claims. ![]() The video has over 2,100 likes and 3,700 shares, as of writing.Ī video posted by Facebook page “Lynn Channel Warriors of Truth” on Tuesday, May 25, claimed that COVID-19 vaccines make people “magnetic.” This can supposedly be detected by attaching magnets to one’s upper arm after getting vaccinated.Īt around the 15:15 mark in the video, Facebook personality Lynn Agno starts showing videos of people vaccinated against COVID-19 with magnets sticking to their upper arms. International travel health, plus immunizations for work, school, immigration. Why we fact-checked this: This Facebook post was sent to Rappler for verification. Visit the AITC, Adult Immunization and Travel Clinic.The facts: The videos shown are of TikTok users participating in a viral “magnet test challenge.” Experts have also said vaccine doses are too small and therefore not strong enough to cause magnetic reactions.Claim: A video posted on Facebook on Tuesday, May 25, claimed that people who received COVID-19 jabs become “magnetic.” This can supposedly be detected by attaching magnets to one’s upper arm after getting vaccinated. The foreign substance detected in dozens of vials of Moderna Inc.’s COVID-19 vaccine in Japan is thought to have been tiny pieces of metal, but experts have dismissed concerns over. ![]()
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