Feature

How physicians and their organizations react to online hate


 

“A sad day. A new low point in the spiral of hate, violence, and lies. Behind every account, there is a person. Do not forget that. In loving memory,” a Twitter user wrote about the death of Lisa-Maria Kellermayr, MD.

“This outcome is very saddening indeed. It should cause everyone to reflect. About interactions in our society, about ‘social’ media, about tolerance, about consideration, and about freedom,” tweeted Dirk Heinrich, MD, chair of the Virchow Association.

The suspected suicide of Dr. Kellermayr, an Austrian vaccinator, is stirring emotions in Germany, too. The active exponent and supporter of COVID-19 measures had been seriously threatened by anti-vaxxers and pandemic deniers. Thousands of people in Vienna said goodbye to her with a solemn vigil. Dr. Kellermayr’s death raises the question of how life-threatening online hatred can be.

Dr. Kellermayr, a vaccination campaigner, had received hateful comments and death threats since the start of the pandemic. But a single post on Twitter changed everything. On Nov. 16, 2021, anti-vaxxers held a demonstration outside the Wels-Grieskirchen Hospital. Dr. Kellermayr tweeted in disgust, “Today in Wels: A demonstration by conspiracy theorists spills into the street under the gaze of the authorities and blocks both the main hospital entrance and the Red Cross ambulance exit.”

At the time of her tweet, Dr. Kellermayr was not aware of additional access that had been made available for ambulances. The police reacted to her tweet, calling it a “false report.” As Florian Klenk writes in the Austrian journal Falter, the police basically criticized Dr. Kellermayr publicly, including in front of the 12,000 Twitter users who follow the police on Twitter.

A screenshot of Dr. Kellermayr’s tweet and the authorities’ response went viral on relevant Telegram forums and triggered a flood of hatred. A COVID denier immediately posted her address online.

Dr. Kellermayr deleted her tweet and asked the police to also delete their tweet, but they did not respond, and the tweet remained online. The country physician was inundated with insults, slurs, and death threats. She was beset by alleged patients who came only to disrupt her work, take videos on their cell phones, and share the photos in anti-vaxxer groups. She privately paid for a security guard, who confiscated butterfly knives from multiple “patients” on their way into the waiting room. Dr. Kellermayr looked for help from the medical association, the police, and the Office for the Protection of the Constitution. She made her problem public.

Police recommend supervision

Dr. Kellermayr received emails in which the senders described in detail how they would kill her and her practice team. The physician took the threats seriously; the police did not. The officers investigated. With the evidence that the perpetrators were operating via the dark web, the officers insinuated to Dr. Kellermayr that it was not possible to find them, Klenk reported.

Dr. Kellermayr filed a complaint for the first time on Nov. 22, 2021. The law enforcement authorities in Upper Austria said they did not have domestic jurisdiction. The Austrian authorities launched another investigation. The German prosecution authorities joined the search for those posting death threats on social media. Even the Munich chief public prosecutor’s office and the Berlin public prosecutor’s office investigated the case.

According to some reports, Dr. Kellermayr did not receive police protection; a patrol was sent over from time to time. According to the police, she should “not be afraid,” and if she was, she should just call them. She was also advised to undergo supervision -- in other words, psychological treatment.

Those who had the power to help her provided no support. On the contrary, the spokesperson for the Upper Austria Police said in the Ö1 Mittagsjournal radio program that Dr. Kellermayr was “putting herself in the public eye for her own selfish benefit.” Even Peter Niedermoser, president of the Medical Association of Upper Austria, told the Austrian daily newspaper Standard, “I understand that you have to defend yourself, but it is a whole other question as to whether you have to discuss every topic to excess on Twitter. Sometimes it’s better to step away.”

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