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Sensing Murder psychic's ad for remote service draws complaint from sceptics

Author
Tracy Neal,
Publish Date
Thu, 10 Aug 2023, 8:41pm
Celebrity psychic Kerry-Marie Callender has removed an advertisement from her website for a new, remote healing service after a complaint from an anti-pseudoscience group. Photo/ Supplied
Celebrity psychic Kerry-Marie Callender has removed an advertisement from her website for a new, remote healing service after a complaint from an anti-pseudoscience group. Photo/ Supplied

Sensing Murder psychic's ad for remote service draws complaint from sceptics

Author
Tracy Neal,
Publish Date
Thu, 10 Aug 2023, 8:41pm

A celebrity psychic鈥檚 advertisement for a remote healing service has irked a group set up to fight pseudoscience in medicine.

Auckland-based Kerry-Marie Callander, described on her website as an internationally trained psychic medium, speaker, published author and TV personality and one of New Zealand鈥檚 most sought-after psychic mediums, was a part of the team of psychics on TVNZ鈥檚聽Sensing Murder.

More recently, a remote healing service offered on her website has caught the attention of the Society for Science-Based Healthcare - a New Zealand-based advocacy group.

Callander was promoting remote healing as being 鈥渧ery effective on an emotional, physical, mental or spiritual level鈥 and potentially helpful for people trying to recover from the Covid-19 pandemic while in isolation or lockdown.

The society鈥檚 complaint to the Advertising Standards Authority (ASA) prompted Callander to remove the advertisement before it got to the authority鈥檚 complaints board.

Daniel Ryan objected to an advertisement on Callender's website.

Daniel Ryan objected to an advertisement on Callender's website.

It complained the ad likely breached the Therapeutic and Health Advertising Code, and contained health claims that had not been substantiated.

In its recently released decision, the ASA said that given Callander had amended the website advertisement, it would serve no further purpose to place the matter before the Complaints Board.

Callander told 九一星空无限 in an email the wording in the advertisement was removed to avoid confusion.

聽鈥淚t was sorted a while ago. They were happy with the outcome and commented that I鈥檓 self-regulating.鈥

She noted the complaint was 鈥渃onnected to the sceptic society鈥 but declined to comment further, including on what was involved in remote healing, or whether she thought the complaint was fair.

The Society for Science-Based Healthcare was co-founded by Wellington software developer Daniel Ryan, who is a member of the NZ Skeptics Society.

He also runs a pub-based health activism group, and is a co-founder and president of Making Sense of Fluoride, set up to debunk 鈥渁nti-fluoride woof***ery and pseudoscience鈥.

Ryan told 九一星空无限 the 280-member society was made up of medical experts, scientists and members of the public 鈥渨orried about claims being advertised鈥.

He said the ASA was the group鈥檚 starting point for getting traction with its activism.

鈥淢ost companies listen to the ASA.鈥

Ryan said his interest began eight to nine years ago after he was shown what he said was misinformation being advertised, and wanted to do his part to help 鈥渃lean it up鈥.

鈥淚t鈥檚 been a never-ending, there鈥檚 just so much bulls**t out there.鈥

He said he did not have a grudge against psychics - he found the subject interesting, and the group was not trying to stop the public from getting these services.

鈥淚 support freedom of choice. I鈥檓 just against made-up claims.鈥

Ryan said the psychic鈥檚 claim in the advertisement that remote healing might help people recover from problems brought on by the pandemic was what attracted his attention.

He said neither himself nor the group targeted things 鈥渨illy-nilly鈥 - just the claims they considered didn鈥檛 make sense, or had no scientific evidence to back them.

He said in most cases for a complaint to succeed, all he had to do was ask for proof.

鈥淯sually with an ASA complaint I just say: 鈥榃hat鈥檚 the evidence?鈥 and it鈥檚 up to the business to defend.

鈥淚f they believe they have that evidence to back the claims being made then they would show it to the ASA and if the authority then accepted it, that鈥檚 that.鈥

Ryan, who said his mission was to 鈥渢ry and improve the world鈥, worked on debunking claims voluntarily in his spare time.

Tracy Neal is a Nelson-based Open Justice reporter at 九一星空无限. She was previously RNZ鈥檚 regional reporter in Nelson-Marlborough and has covered general news, including court and local government for the聽Nelson Mail.

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