FACT CHECK: No, Fox News Commentator Did Not Die From ‘Turbo Cancer’
Post shared on facebook FOX News commentator Kelly Powers claims to have died from “turbo cancer.”
Verdict: False
This claim comes from a site known for posting false information. “Turbo cancer” is a term coined by conspiracy theorists and has no medical evidence.
Fact check:
Tennis player Gabriela Dabrowski revealed that she had been diagnosed with breast cancer after finding a lump in 2023, the newspaper reported. guardian. Dombrowski underwent surgery before returning to the court, but his treatment was delayed until Wimbledon, the newspaper reported.
According to a Facebook post, Powers died from a disease called “turbo cancer.” The post shared a photo of the headline that makes the claim, along with a disclaimer that claims the claim has been verified.
The headline read, “Vaccinated Fox News Doctor Kelly Powers Survives On-Air Heart Attack, Dies from Turbo Cancer.”
The caption reads, “Turbo cancer started after vaccination.”
However, this claim is inaccurate. it’s the stem From the site called people’s voicesfrequently posts incorrect information. The site says “terms of service“This site makes no representations about the suitability, reliability, availability, timeliness, and accuracy of the information, software, products, services, and related graphics contained on the site for any purpose. There is a disclaimer that says “No.”
Permissions posted in Instagram In July 2020, he announced his diagnosis of brain tumor. According to reports, she died of a brain tumor earlier this month. new york post. According to reports, a COVID-19 vaccine did not become available until months after she disclosed her illness in December 2020. ale medicineso it can’t have caused her brain tumor. (Related: No, FOX News is not reporting that Newsom will withhold California federal income taxes)
The term “turbo cancer” was coined by conspiracy theorists to “refer to aggressive, rapidly growing cancers seen after vaccination,” but lacks medical evidence. Global vaccine data network.
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FACT CHECK: No, Fox News Commentator Did Not Die From ‘Turbo Cancer’
Post shared on facebook FOX News commentator Kelly Powers claims to have died from “turbo cancer.”
Verdict: False
This claim comes from a site known for posting false information. “Turbo cancer” is a term coined by conspiracy theorists and has no medical evidence.
Fact check:
Tennis player Gabriela Dabrowski revealed that she had been diagnosed with breast cancer after finding a lump in 2023, the newspaper reported. guardian. Dombrowski underwent surgery before returning to the court, but his treatment was delayed until Wimbledon, the newspaper reported.
According to a Facebook post, Powers died from a disease called “turbo cancer.” The post shared a photo of the headline that makes the claim, along with a disclaimer that claims the claim has been verified.
The headline read, “Vaccinated Fox News Doctor Kelly Powers Survives On-Air Heart Attack, Dies from Turbo Cancer.”
The caption reads, “Turbo cancer started after vaccination.”
However, this claim is inaccurate. it’s the stem From the site called people’s voicesfrequently posts incorrect information. The site says “terms of service“This site makes no representations about the suitability, reliability, availability, timeliness, and accuracy of the information, software, products, services, and related graphics contained on the site for any purpose. There is a disclaimer that says “No.”
Permissions posted in Instagram In July 2020, he announced his diagnosis of brain tumor. According to reports, she died of a brain tumor earlier this month. new york post. According to reports, a COVID-19 vaccine did not become available until months after she disclosed her illness in December 2020. ale medicineso it can’t have caused her brain tumor. (Related: No, FOX News is not reporting that Newsom will withhold California federal income taxes)
The term “turbo cancer” was coined by conspiracy theorists to “refer to aggressive, rapidly growing cancers seen after vaccination,” but lacks medical evidence. Global vaccine data network.
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