Megaphone Madness: how reckless media impeded Victorias Covid-19 recovery
October 18, 2020
The media we consume influences our compliance with Covid-19 recommendations. Poor media coverage in Victoria is impeding the states recovery.

Three months ago, Victorian Premier Daniel Andrews fronted his daily press conference and announced a record 723 new cases of Covid-19 overnight. That number has now fallen to just two in Victoria. This has been achieved in the face of a campaign from the media and the Liberal Party, state and federal, to undermine the state governments response.
Trust in the government is crucial to citizens adhering to restrictions that are central to controlling the spread of Covid-19. The media typically has an important role in that process: theoretically, the government cannot act too outlandishly for fear of public backlash.
But when ownership of the media is so heavily concentrated in the hands of a few, as is the situation in Australia, the absence of diversity can make it difficult for contrasting views to be given equal airtime. This can undermine the public health messaging and response, as the stubborn embers of Victorias second wave of Covid-19 are smothered. And the coverage of Covid-19 in recent months has been far from balanced, nor even accurate.
_The Australian_ran anarticlelinking the Black Lives Matter protest to Covid-19 outbreaks in the Flemington housing commission apartments, while_The Herald Sun_suggested the source of the spread from hotel quarantine was a security guard having sex with a returned traveller. Neither story is correct, but they remain online. And as with any falsehood, once repeated enough times they are taken as the truth.
Sky News ran a headline in late September stating that the hotel quarantine inquiry finds the government responsible for deaths of 768 people. Again, false. The inquiry is not set to release its findings until November. This one at least was subsequently updated to hears that the government was responsible.
Sky Host Paul Murray also claimed on air that death by suicide is on the rise again, the data does not stack up. There may be an increase in mental health issues in Victoria, but not of suicide.
_The Australian_publishedmodellingit claimed was leaked from the Victorian government, warning of thousands of cases a day in weeks to come. It bore a striking resemblance to a graphposted on Twitter.
Phil Coorey, in an article published in the_Australian Financial Review_, likened Victorians support for Premier Andrews to the cult-like support of Donald Trump. ABC Breakfast presenter Michael Rowland tweeted an endorsement of the article.
The media coverage in recent months has undoubtedly polarised Victoria. But it is ludicrous to liken those who support the actions of a government that has imposed strict lockdowns to successfully contain the spread of the pandemic to those supporting a president whose lack of action has seen the pandemic take more than 200,000 American lives.
Polls with all the caveats required consistently show a majority of Victorians support Andrews. So much was made of a poll in_The Age_showing a supposed collapse in support for Andrews and which was seized on by Sky News host Chris Kenny.Media Watchdemolished the poll by demonstrating how it was besieged by bots, yet Kenny has yet to retract his claims.
In recent days, the report that the World Health Organisation backflipped on its stance on lockdowns has gained prominent coverage. But, again, it was taken out of context and used to undermine the patience of Victorians in lockdown.
Thestatementwas not officially endorsed by the WHO, but was a comment from a doctor from the WHO that lockdowns should not be the primary method of Covid-19 control. They shouldnt. They arent. Test, trace and isolate remains the primary method of control: lockdowns are to bring the numbers down to a level where this can be achievable. The WHO backflipped on nothing; lockdowns remain an effective tool for suppressing virus spread.
Researchpublished last week found that partisan coverage affects compliance with measures to halt the spread of Covid-19. Compared to those who trust CNN in America, those trusting Fox News were less likely to engage in behaviour that stopped the spread of infection, and more likely to behave in a way that promoted the spread of the virus.
Take the new cluster in Shepparton. Patient zero did not mention they had travelled to Shepparton, leaving the virus to circulate undetected. Andrews has stated there will be no punishment for those who are honest with contact tracers. Meanwhile, Nine Entertainment has run a headline stating that Premier Andrews will come after you if you break the rules. The messaging from the government could be clearer, but in a public health crisis the media also has an important role to play in communicating clear and consistent messages.
The Liberal party has also tried to undermine public trust. One Victorian MP posted cards appearing totarget Labor leadersthat bore a striking resemblance to catch and kill cards used by the USA in Iraq to target Al-Qaeda members. Another planted Australian flags to represent the 790 Victorians who lost their lives. Yet most of these deaths were in aged care homes, which fall under federal responsibility.
Alan Tudge and Josh Frydenberg have also taken to Twitter to express their concern over the mental health of Victorians. As human services minister in 2016-17, Tudge oversaw the Robodebt scheme.The Department told a Senate committee that more than 2,000 people died after receiving Robodebt letters.
The deaths included a spate of suicides, largely among young people.
Frydenberg has refused to commit to continuing the coronavirus supplement beyond December, saying it will depend on the state of the job market. Yet before the pandemic, there were more than700,000 people who were unemployedwho were trying to exist on less than $40 a day, some 30% below the poverty rate. Poverty and unemployment are the great drivers of mental health issues, not lockdowns.
It is undeniable that there have been major failings by the Andrews government. The hotel quarantine let Covid-19 out; the response was run from a logistic, not a health, point of view; contact tracing has been under-resourced and inadequate, while governments messaging on who should get tested remains confusing. These are the issues that the opposition should be pinning the government down on, forcing Labor to improve. The opposition hasnt, until today (October 16) when Opposition Leader Michael OBrien released hisalternative roadmap.
Accountability and criticism are important, but for the benefit of all Victorians these should occur in a calmer atmosphere.

Michael Tanner
Michael Tanner is completing a Doctor of Medicine/Doctor of Philosophy. His writing explores the intersection of economics, the media and public health. His writing has also been published in The Age. Michael’s Twitter handle is @MichaelTanner_