Givealittle being used to fund bogus treatments

About a year ago Daniel Ryan and I wrote to Givealittle, an organisation in NZ that runs an online platform which allows people to fundraise for needy causes. We expressed our concerns about misuse of the platform:

"We have recently been concerned by the number of causes on your website where money is being requested to fund a wide variety of pseudoscientific, often dangerous, medical treatments.

It would be great to see Givealittle do more to protect both donors and recipients, and to reduce the amount of money being donated to fundraisers where the funds will be spent on unproven therapies. Has Givealittle considered... not allowing pseudoscientific treatment claims to be made by users of the website, making it clear to donors that for certain causes their money will go towards funding non evidence-based treatments and not allowing fundraising for treatments that are not evidence based?"

We included a list of donation pages where the therapies mentioned were obviously never going to help the people asking for the money - for cancer alone, we found people fundraising for vitamin C treatment, magnet therapy, dietary supplements, osteopathy, acupuncture, superfoods, detoxes, cleanses and a Shaman. We stated that these fundraising pages seemed to breach Givealittle's own terms and conditions about not using inaccurate, ambiguous, exaggerated or untrue information.

At the time, Givealittle responded that:

“Whilst we do not allow pseudoscientific treatment claims to be made on a Givealittle page, we will not restrict fundraising for pages for treatments that are not evidence based… Givealittle is a neutral platform”

Well, that was obviously untrue - we had no problems finding pseudoscientific treatment claims on their website. We responded:

“It's sad to read that you consider that neutrality is an acceptable position to take when it comes to the serious topic of people's health, often including terminal illness, and the raising of money to pay unscrupulous alternative medicine practitioners for unproven, frequently dangerous, treatments”

It was obvious we were getting nowhere, but we remained concerned about the site being used in this way. Fast forward to a year later, and this week Givealittle has come under fire for allowing over $7,000 to be raised for a case where Casey from Auckland has supposedly been injured by the Pfizer COVID vaccine.

This is a very sad case, where Casey is obviously going through a lot - suffering from uncontrollable spasms which make driving, working or even walking impossible for her. The video on the Givealittle page is heartbreaking, as was a video she recently posted to her Facebook page, and I truly feel sorry for her.

However, as a Stuff article points out, evidence for the vaccine being responsible for any of Casey's symptoms is lacking. We also know that similar cases of unusual reactions to vaccines in the past have been shown to be psychogenic, where the source of the problem is mental rather than due to vaccine injury. Desiree Jennings is one well known case from around 10 years ago, with symptoms including only being able to walk normally if she walked backwards, and speaking in a British accent - all after having had a flu shot. Inconsistencies soon started appearing in her story. Shawn Skelton and Angelia Desselle are two recent cases where claimed symptoms from COVID shots are unlikely to have been caused by the vaccine.

And, unsurprisingly, the “treatments” mentioned on the fundraising page are all very alternative: vitamin c infusions, glutathione, lipoic acid, detoxing, magnesium. Given the lack of plausibility of the vaccine causing the kinds of symptoms Casey is experiencing, and the push to use the money raised on unproven treatments, I suspect that there's more going on in this case than meets the eye.

Tellingly, professor Graham Le Gros called the page a “scam” and Helen Petousis-Harris said to Stuff:

“There is no easy way to verify the legitimacy of people who seek funding, and scams have been known to occur. This should not be seen as evidence that the girl's symptoms have been caused by a vaccine.”

Helen will be speaking in a panel at our conference this weekend with Siouxsie Wiles, Ashley Bloomfield and Kate Hannah - get your tickets now!