,
Harriet Hall,
David Gorski, and Rachael Dunlop (right) on a panel at
The Amaz!ng Meeting 2012 Rachael Dunlop became involved in the scientific skepticism movement in 2008 after meeting
Australian Skeptics president
Richard Saunders at a
Skeptics in the Pub event. She is currently the vice-president of the
New South Wales committee of the Australian Skeptics, and she has a regular segment called "Dr. Rachie Reports" on the organisation's podcast,
The Skeptic Zone, where she dissects the claims of
alternative medicine practitioners. She also co-organizes the Sydney Skeptics
Meetup group and helped organise
The Amaz!ng Meeting Australia. In 2008 Dunlop joined The Mystery Investigators, headed by Australian Skeptics president
Richard Saunders. The program teaches students to use science and critical thinking to investigate claims of the paranormal, such as
water divining,
spoon bending, and
firewalking. Much of Dunlop's advocacy as a skeptic is focused on countering the claims of the anti-vaccination movement, specifically the
Australian Vaccination Network (AVN) and its former president Meryl Dorey. In 2010 the AVN was ordered by the
Health Care Complaints Commission to post a prominent warning on their website, but the organisation refused to comply and appealed the decision. In response, Dunlop and other skeptics organised a "
Google bomb" so that Web searches for the name of the organisation resulted in several links to critical websites on the first page of results. In 2009 the Australian Skeptics presented Dorey and the AVN with their
Bent Spoon Award, which is "presented to the perpetrator of the most preposterous piece of paranormal or pseudoscientific piffle". Dorey quickly responded with a
media release sarcastically "accepting" the award. After the highly publicised 2009 death of four-week-old Dana McCaffery from whooping cough—a vaccine-preventable disease—AVN's Dorey claimed in a televised interview that the girl's death was unrelated to the disease. This inspired Dunlop and other skeptics to create a "Stop the AVN" Facebook group to advocate against the Australian anti-vaccination movement. Dunlop has a blog, ''The Sceptics' Book of Pooh-Pooh
, where she writes about the Australian anti-vaccination movement and other science- and health-related topics. She has also contributed articles to the Science-Based Medicine blog about the Australian Vaccination Network, among other topics. She occasionally writes articles on alternative medicine for The Conversation''. She was invited to speak on two panels at
The Amaz!ng Meeting 2012: "The Truth About Alternative Medicine" and "Dr. Google." Dunlop argued in an editorial in
The Guardian that media reporting of vaccine-related topics gives too much weight to voices from the anti-vaccine movement since they represent an insignificant minority compared to doctors and scientists who recommend vaccination. Dunlop won a 2010
Shorty Award in the Health category for her Twitter posts on medical issues. ==Media==