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Should you trust Dr. Google?
Online health information is incomplete, incorrect, or intentionally misleading
- by Rohit KhannaRohit Khanna Updated 16:43, Nov. 26, 2019 | Published 13:40, Dec. 19, 2017This article was published over a year ago. Some information may no longer be current.
Rohit Khanna is the Founder and Managing Director of Catalytic Health, a leading healthcare communications, education, and strategy agency based in Toronto.
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All year, we’ve reported on a Canada that’s feeling the squeeze—soaring rents, climbing grocery bills, and the daily struggles of many families—and the policy decisions causing this. Understanding these issues, and the solutions being proposed, isn’t easy in a world awash with misinformation and partisan spin.
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Carmine Starnino
Editor-in-Chief, The Walrus
Cut through the noise with The Walrus.
All year, we’ve reported on a Canada that’s feeling the squeeze—soaring rents, climbing grocery bills, and the daily struggles of many families—and the policy decisions causing this. Understanding these issues, and the solutions being proposed, isn’t easy in a world awash with misinformation and partisan spin.
That’s where The Walrus comes in. Our mission is to cut through the noise, to connect the dots between the policies debated in Parliament and the realities playing out in your neighbourhood. To do that, we need your support. Help us keep telling the stories that matter. Donate today.