Madonna has been censored by Instagram. The content-sharing platform flagged a post from the queen of pop that showed a coronavirus conspiracy theory to her 15.4 million followers.

Madonna shared a controversial video this week and claimed that a vaccine for coronavirus had already been found months ago. However, people in power, allegedly, have been hiding it to "let the rich get richer." 

Instagram, at first, blurred out the video and put a caption over it saying: "False Information - Reviewed by independent fact-checkers." It, also, directed users to a page that debunked the claims in the video and stressed there is still no coronavirus vaccine. The video was, later, deleted from Madonna's official Instagram page. 

Fans, and even a fellow celebrity, slammed Madonna for sharing the video. Fans also protested the singer's decision to share it. 

Annie Lennox criticized the "Vogue" singer for sharing it with her millions of followers. In a screenshot of Lennox's tweet shared on Twitter, she called Madonna's post "utter madness." 

Lennox said she can't believe the "Material Girl" hitmaker would endorse such a dangerous fraudulent claim. Lennox added she's hoping that Madonna's IG account was hacked so she has an excuse for her action. 

The controversial video featured a group, called America's Frontline Doctors, wearing white medical coats while speaking outside the U.S. Supreme Court building at an event organized by Tea Party Patriots Action. In the clip, one Houston-based Dr. Stella Immanuel claimed she had successfully treated 350 coronavirus patients with hydroxychloroquine. Madonna also called Immanuel in her post as "my hero."

Facebook and Twitter had, previously, flagged the same video as misinformation and removed it from the sites. Donald Trump Jr. was also banned from tweeting for 12 hours as a penalty for sharing the same clip.

Madonna has yet to make a statement about IG's action on her post as well as on Lennox and her fans' reactions. It is worth noting this wasn't the first time that Madonna made a false claim about COVID-19. 

In March, she shared a video of her sitting naked in a tub filled with water and pink rose petals while describing the coronavirus as "the great equalizer." Madonna also claimed, in May, that she had tested positive for antibodies that supposedly gave her immunity from the disease. The "Like A Virgin" singer also assumed that she and her team got exposed to COVID-19 at the end of her Madame X world tour earlier this year.