The Mercury Project: Call for proposalsFact-check: Beauty products, home remedies cannot make you fairerBook review: Dr Cuterus demystifies sexual healthFact-check: Omicron BA.5 not ‘fatal for the brain’ Think twice before mixing alcohol with energy drinksFact-check: Acupressure no remedy for common coldExplainer: How is Tomato flu different from other viral fevers?Health misinformation: Meta preparing post-pandemic policyFact-check: Mud baths not a blanket therapy Fact-check: St. John’s wort not superior to antidepressants Can men get breast cancer?Explainer: Why excessive cleanliness may be injurious to health Fact-check: Milk + lemon not an instant remedy for pilesFact-check: Ice is not the cure, it may relieve symptomsFact-check: Brain death is not a hoax Fact-check: No evidence to back unborn baby’s sex prediction mythsFact Check: Should we take up Nyquil Chicken Challenge?Fact-check: Liver detoxes are futileFact-check: Indian politician wrongly claims biryani diminishes male sex drive Fact-check: Examining the myth about regaining virginity Fact-Check: Ghee and cow milk do not cure cancerFact-check: Guava leaves cannot cure tumours Fact-check: Chiropractic therapy not a magic bullet for gastrointestinal problems International Yoga Day 2022: Busting Yoga MythsHome remedies for migraine may not be effectiveHealth misinformation: Each one spot oneFact-check: Monkeypox is not a skin diseaseFact-check: ‘Natural’ remedies can’t cure asthmaFlaxseed: No cure for thyroid problemsNo, marijuana cannot cure cancerVideo warning against eating bitter gourd with ladyfinger gets 88 million FB viewsFact-check: Sunscreens don’t cause cancerFact-check: MSG is safe for human consumptionFact-check: ‘Green juice’ cannot cure cancer Fact-check: Vaccinated people are not more likely to die of COVID-19Don’t ignore period painFact-checking: Why context matters‘There is no vaccine for the infodemic’Step up the fight against misinformation ‘Fact-checking is often neglected in medical discourse’ ‘Scientific research must be easy to find & share’Why medical professionals need to take up fact-checkingWhy I became a fact-checker: A story of loss, resolve & hopeUncovering 2 common infertility mythsNo home remedy to induce menstruation within an hour!International Women’s Day: Breaking the mental health biasNational Science Day: Embrace scientific temper, fight health misinformationDecoding the ‘COVID-19 lung’First Check inducts five new members World Cancer Day: Spread facts, not fear
We ensure that we fact-check submissions by readers. However, as we can’t feasibly check all claims, we select the most newsworthy ones based on editorial judgement, subject relevance and interest.
Also, we ensure that the claims have the following
- We only check claims that are related to public health and medical misinformation.
- We mostly focus on claims related to Asia's public health and other claims related to public health which have not been fact-checked by other organisations.
- We also examine impact and virality of the claims - Would a typical person read it and immediately believe it thereby causing real-world harm?
- We select content to fact-check based on criteria including editorial interest, how widely something has been shared.