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'Wiki Wonka and the Covid-19 factory': Hearing underway for doctor who posted controversial videos online

Author
Emily Moorhouse,
Publish Date
Mon, 14 Aug 2023, 3:55pm
Dr Samantha Bailey is being investigated by the Health Practitioners Disciplinary Tribunal for videos she posted to her YouTube account during the Covid-19 pandemic.
Dr Samantha Bailey is being investigated by the Health Practitioners Disciplinary Tribunal for videos she posted to her YouTube account during the Covid-19 pandemic.

'Wiki Wonka and the Covid-19 factory': Hearing underway for doctor who posted controversial videos online

Author
Emily Moorhouse,
Publish Date
Mon, 14 Aug 2023, 3:55pm

A Christchurch doctor accused of sharing 鈥渕isleading and inappropriate鈥 information about the Covid-19 pandemic on her YouTube channel to thousands of subscribers is being investigated by the health practitioner鈥檚 watchdog.

Dr Samantha Bailey, who previously presented a TVNZ show, shared 23 videos on her social media, between March 2020 and July 2021, including one titled 鈥淲iki Wonka and the Covid-19 Factory鈥.

Now, the Health Practitioners Disciplinary Tribunal (HPDT) is investigating the doctors鈥檚 conduct after the Professional Conduct Committee (PCC) received 15 complaints about the content she shared online.

While Bailey has not engaged in the tribunal鈥檚 process, and did not make an appearance at today鈥檚 hearing, she had previously tried to stop an investigation in 2021 until a judicial review could be heard. That was declined by a High Court judge on the basis of the balance of convenience and the interests of justice.

The Christchurch hearing before HPDT Chair Winston McCarthy and four tribunal members had only been under way for an hour when it was temporarily adjourned when members of the public, claiming they represented 鈥渢he truth鈥, began to interrupt.

They called the hearing a 鈥渒angaroo court鈥 and said Bailey was simply expressing her 鈥渇reedom of speech鈥. One woman went as far as to claim it should be the tribunal members on trial.

鈥淚 hope you know you鈥檙e gonna be on the wrong side of history, all of you,鈥 she said to the tribunal members before being asked to leave by security.

McCarthy briefly adjourned the hearing as members of the public continued to speak, warning them that if they continued to interrupt, they would be asked to leave.

However, McCarthy added he understood that some people may disagree with what was being discussed and would allow members of the public to speak briefly after the PCC had finished presenting its case.

Dr Jonathan Coates for the PCC said the content, uploaded to Bailey鈥檚 YouTube channel, titled 鈥淒r Sam Bailey鈥 were 鈥渟elf-styled鈥 health advice videos that were 鈥渋nappropriate and misleading鈥.

She had more than 200,000 subscribers with more than 18 million views on her channel and attracted tens of thousands of comments, Coates said.

The tribunal heard that Bailey had written to the Medical Council stating she stood by the validity of her content and that the complaints raised about her should be seen as 鈥渢rolling鈥.

Coates said Bailey 鈥減ublicly shared harmful information鈥 during the Covid-19 pandemic which amounted to professional misconduct 鈥渟ufficiently serious鈥 to warrant sanction by the tribunal.

On Monday Bailey鈥檚 videos, some of which were removed by YouTube for breaching its medical misinformation policy, and some removed by her, were played to the tribunal.

Coates asked the tribunal members to try and remember what life was like with many people experiencing 鈥渃haos and anxiety鈥 during the pandemic while watching the videos.

The videos show Bailey sitting in front of the camera speaking about issues related to Covid-19. She often starts the videos by saying what she is discussing is her personal opinion and references various research papers in relation to the virus.

She states she is 鈥渄efinitely not鈥 getting the Covid-19 vaccine and encourages people to read a book she co-wrote titled聽Virus Mania.

Coates said it wasn鈥檛 just what Bailey said but the way she said it which was problematic for her as a member of the profession, with the use of memes throughout her videos.

He described the difference between misinformation and disinformation, the former being false information shared with no harm intended, the latter being false information knowingly shared to cause harm.

Coates submitted that Bailey鈥檚 content included disinformation and had 鈥渘o special legal or medical meaning鈥.

He said the videos had the potential to mislead people in relation to Polymerase Chain Reaction (PCR) tests as a way of detecting Covid-19, the Covid-19 vaccines and issues relating to the virus. He also said comments Bailey made about other medical practitioners were inappropriate.

The PCC will call four witnesses, including experts in infectious diseases, vaccines and information disorders.

The tribunal will also hear evidence from someone who described feeling 鈥渄esperate for authoritative information on the pandemic鈥.

The hearing, expected to take a week, continues.

Emily Moorhouse is a Christchurch-based Open Justice journalist at 九一星空无限. She joined 九一星空无限 in 2022. Before that, she was at the聽Christchurch Star.

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