misinformation

Responding to Health Misinformation: A Media Literacy Approach (Thu 30 Jul)

Event Description

While the internet provides considerable opportunities to access and share information, it also increases people’s exposure to misinformation. It is increasingly difficult to determine the trustworthiness of the media in our environment, which is of particular concern in the field of health. Evidence suggests health misinformation is having real-world widespread negative consequences.

This talk explores how a media literacy approach can help organisations, community groups and citizens respond to the challenge that misinformation poses. It draws on findings from a 3-year research study that partnered with four public cultural institutions: Australian Library and Information Association, ABC Education, Museum of Australia Democracy and the National Film and Sound Archive of Australia.

Presenters

Tanya Notley & Daisy De Windt

Bios

Tanya Notley is Professor of Digital Media in the School of Arts and a member of the Institute for Culture and Society. Tanya currently leads a national project that uses media literacy to address online misinformation through a collaboration with national public cultural institutions. Tanya leads the Advancing Media Literacy Program at WSU and is a founding member of Australian Media Literacy Alliance (AMLA).

Daisy De Windt has over 20 years’ experience working in research, medical education and health communications, including over 10 years producing engaging, evidence-based media for a range of audiences. She has completed degrees in Psychology, Health Law, Biomedical Science and Business and is a PhD candidate at Western Sydney University. 

When

Thursday, 30 July 2026
12:30pm – 1:30pm  AEST

Where

Online webinar Zoom – a link will be sent the day prior.

This event will be recorded and sent to attendees following the event.

Cost

ALIA Members – FREE (another reason to consider HLA Membership)
Non-Members – $22

Register

Register