Difference between revisions of "Marc Van Ranst"
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|birth_date=20 June 1965 | |birth_date=20 June 1965 | ||
|birth_place=Bornem, Belgium | |birth_place=Bornem, Belgium | ||
− | |constitutes=Doctor, deep state functionary? | + | |constitutes=Doctor, propagandist, deep state functionary? |
|description=Belgian doctor who gave a light-hearted lecture about the use of deception surrounding the [[swine flu in 2009]] | |description=Belgian doctor who gave a light-hearted lecture about the use of deception surrounding the [[swine flu in 2009]] | ||
}} | }} | ||
− | '''Marc Van Ranst''' is a Belgian | + | '''Marc Van Ranst''' is a Belgian public health official and Professor of [[Virology]] at the [[Katholieke Universiteit Leuven]] and the [[Rega Institute for Medical Research]]. On 1 May 2007, he was appointed as ''Interministerial comissionar'' by the Belgian federal government to prepare Belgium for influenza pandemics. |
==Chatham House lecture== | ==Chatham House lecture== |
Latest revision as of 18:09, 13 December 2024
Marc Van Ranst (Doctor, propagandist, deep state functionary?) | |
---|---|
Born | 20 June 1965 Bornem, Belgium |
Nationality | Belgium |
Alma mater | Hasselt University, Katholieke Universiteit Leuven |
Interests | • Pandemics • Public messaging |
Interest of | Jürgen Conings |
Belgian doctor who gave a light-hearted lecture about the use of deception surrounding the swine flu in 2009 |
Marc Van Ranst is a Belgian public health official and Professor of Virology at the Katholieke Universiteit Leuven and the Rega Institute for Medical Research. On 1 May 2007, he was appointed as Interministerial comissionar by the Belgian federal government to prepare Belgium for influenza pandemics.
Chatham House lecture
In his 2019 lecture at Chatham House he makes several observations how he established successful public messaging (crisis communication) during the outbreak of the swine flu in 2009:[1][2]
Communication and public engagement MARC VAN RANST - Lecture by Marc Van Ranst, Belgian Flu Commissioner, at the ESWI/Chatham House Influenza Pandemic Preparedness Stakeholders Conference on 22 January 2019. |
- it is important to be omnipresent in the first days of the start of a pandemic, attracting media attention, making journalists used to get all important information from you (the public health official)
- the first weeks are easy since your information will be accepted, "the news is brought the way you bring it"
- if you have good preexisting relationships with the media, you can ask they do some segments for you for free on a "return favor" basis
- Facebook and Twitter were not helpful at that time
- talking about fatalities is important (to get attention)
- inexperienced journalists will bring problems as time moves on
- "get the vaccine while you can", "not enough vaccine" to generate high uptake
- people in Belgium are also watching French television and were getting different information, creating problems for the messaging he tried to get out
- Wolfgang Wodarg is incorrect to allege corruption and big pharma influence on scientists and government agencies
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References
- ↑ https://www.chathamhouse.org/events/all/research-event/influenza-preparedness-stakeholder-conference-centenary-1918-pandemic saved at Archive.org
- ↑ https://www.brusselstimes.com/news/belgium-all-news/155486/how-to-sell-an-epidemic-a-marc-van-ranst-conspiracy-theory-explained-chatham-house-pandemic-vlaams-belang-h1n1/