So, COVID and its new variants are the big news right now, along with continued government inaction (and some would say, refusal to act). Totally understandable. But, I'd like to draw your attention to this:
The short story on this is due to COVID precautions, we're having the cold, cough, and flu season that isn't. Masks, social distancing, and proper hygiene and sanitation have all but stopped it. The approximately 40,000 Americans who die on average to flu every year, aren't dying of flu this year (granted they're probably dying of COVID instead, but bear with me) and that's something that really ought to be paid heed.
We didn't consider 40,000 Americans every year to flu a big deal. I mean after all, flu has less than a 1% mortality rate, and almost all of those mortalities are attributed to those with comorbidities. Kind of like COVID when one thinks about it, right? But more importantly, this year's lack of a cold/flu season demonstrates how those deaths are preventable. It's hardly the least predictable secondary consequence of current anti-COVID measures in the world, but the dearth of its mention right now is honestly pretty interesting.
Because...what do we do post-COVID? Do we learn from past mistakes and actually maintain practices that limit infectious disease spread during cold and flu season, or do we go right back to coughing and rubbing up on one another with unwashed hands, sharing unsanitized goods and supplies, and other nasty-ass old, bad, habits that enabled the spread of communicable diseases?
Weekly U.S. Influenza Surveillance Report
Learn more about the weekly influenza surveillance report (FluView) prepared by the Influenza Division.
www.cdc.gov
The short story on this is due to COVID precautions, we're having the cold, cough, and flu season that isn't. Masks, social distancing, and proper hygiene and sanitation have all but stopped it. The approximately 40,000 Americans who die on average to flu every year, aren't dying of flu this year (granted they're probably dying of COVID instead, but bear with me) and that's something that really ought to be paid heed.
We didn't consider 40,000 Americans every year to flu a big deal. I mean after all, flu has less than a 1% mortality rate, and almost all of those mortalities are attributed to those with comorbidities. Kind of like COVID when one thinks about it, right? But more importantly, this year's lack of a cold/flu season demonstrates how those deaths are preventable. It's hardly the least predictable secondary consequence of current anti-COVID measures in the world, but the dearth of its mention right now is honestly pretty interesting.
Because...what do we do post-COVID? Do we learn from past mistakes and actually maintain practices that limit infectious disease spread during cold and flu season, or do we go right back to coughing and rubbing up on one another with unwashed hands, sharing unsanitized goods and supplies, and other nasty-ass old, bad, habits that enabled the spread of communicable diseases?
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