![]() ![]() The bottom line is that COVID-19 vaccines do not contain materials, or ‘microchips’, that would generate a magnetic reaction in someone’s body after having been injected with a vaccine. This effect is similar to how it’s possible to “stick” a coin to your forehead or balance a spoon on your nose.”įor a really comprehensive and simple debunk of this phenomenon, see this article by American fact checker Snopes. “It’s much more likely that the videos are showing adhesion of the magnet to the skin, thanks partly to moisture on the skin’s surface and the fact that the magnet is small and light. This latest anti-vaccine phenomenon and associated false claims, like so many others, seems to originate from within US-based anti-vaccine groups.īritish fact checker, Full Fact, states of the phenomenon: The magnet-sticking-to-arm phenomenon has been circulating and been debunked by fact checkers around the world over recent weeks. The false claim that COVID-19 vaccines contain microchips has been coming on for most of the last year, since early 2020, and refuses to die down. The magnet-sticking-to-arm thing has become the latest anti-vaccine phenomenon being amplified by anti-vaccine profiles, pages and groups across various social media platforms. The phenomenon has even spawned an online movement – the #MagnetChallenge – of people recording and posting videos of how objects claimed to be magnets stick to the site on their upper arms where a COVID-19 vaccine was supposedly injected. ![]() Video clips of people sticking what they claim to be magnets to where they claim a COVID-19 vaccine was administered on their upper arms have been going viral in WhatsApp groups and on social media, with some even claiming it was proof that COVID-19 vaccines contained metal parts or even microchips. IMAGE: Namibia Fact Check / WhatsApp Viral videos show people sticking ‘magnets’ to where they were supposedly vaccinated, but there is no proof that vaccines cause a magnetic reaction. ![]()
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