Why you might (or might not) be charged for routine cancer blood work: election campaigns and the fog of war
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Why you might (or might not) be charged for routine cancer blood work: election campaigns and the fog of war

One the most common questions we ask around here is, "is this true?" In a world of misinformation, disinformation and mischief-making, finding reality beneath the veil can be increasingly difficult. In our latest Insight, Delphic Research's Davi Sihota decided to do a little detective work of her own.

In the final days of the last Ontario election, our monitoring platform detected the emergence of a possible policy change with the potential to wake up voters from an uninspiring election that left most Ontario voters at home. That issue, which began as a tweet, begged the question: was the Ontario government now demanding patients pay for cancer blood screening tests ordered by their doctor? Read on to see what Davi found out -- and the truth it reveals about the truth during election campaigns:

Samantha Thompson PhD MLIS

Senior archivist and story saver | Research and information professional | Humanities and knowledge communicator

2 年

Great work on marshalling the available facts. I watched this issue (and the resulting distress) erupt in real time on Twitter. You've asked some great questions, and that's more than half the battle in ferreting out the truth.

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