Published on in Vol 2, No 1 (2022): Jan-Jun

Preprints (earlier versions) of this paper are available at https://preprints.jmir.org/preprint/29894, first published .
Misinformation About and Interest in Chlorine Dioxide During the COVID-19 Pandemic in Mexico Identified Using Google Trends Data: Infodemiology Study

Misinformation About and Interest in Chlorine Dioxide During the COVID-19 Pandemic in Mexico Identified Using Google Trends Data: Infodemiology Study

Misinformation About and Interest in Chlorine Dioxide During the COVID-19 Pandemic in Mexico Identified Using Google Trends Data: Infodemiology Study

Journals

  1. Wasike B. When the influencer says jump! How influencer signaling affects engagement with COVID-19 misinformation. Social Science & Medicine 2022;315:115497 View
  2. Andrés C, Lastra J, Andrés Juan C, Plou F, Pérez-Lebeña E. Chlorine Dioxide: Friend or Foe for Cell Biomolecules? A Chemical Approach. International Journal of Molecular Sciences 2022;23(24):15660 View
  3. Gupta Y, Savytskyi O, Coban M, Venugopal A, Pleqi V, Weber C, Chitale R, Durvasula R, Hopkins C, Kempaiah P, Caulfield T. Protein structure-based in-silico approaches to drug discovery: Guide to COVID-19 therapeutics. Molecular Aspects of Medicine 2023;91:101151 View
  4. Deiner M, Kaur G, McLeod S, Schallhorn J, Chodosh J, Hwang D, Lietman T, Porco T. A Google Trends Approach to Identify Distinct Diurnal and Day-of-Week Web-Based Search Patterns Related to Conjunctivitis and Other Common Eye Conditions: Infodemiology Study. Journal of Medical Internet Research 2022;24(7):e27310 View
  5. Sauvayre R. Dissemination of a “Fake Miracle Cure” against COVID-19 on Twitter: The Case of Chlorine Dioxide. Social Sciences 2023;12(6):320 View