I agree with many of the things you said. I read back over some posts and wanted to just add a few things for clarity and depth. Sorry for derailing the vaccine discussion a bit more.
I probably should have just said TB, as its airborne transmission is the most comparable, and its disease burden is the most silently high. I have a little experience with all 3 of those diseases as well as COVID-19. I’ve seen death from all of them. I think I subconsciously listed Malaria as I remember when we were semi-panicked about anyone coming from Africa with a fever automatically terrified it was Ebola. All the while we continued to forget about Malaria like we have often done. Scary things grab headlines and make us lose perspective. I included HIV, because I’ve had people close to me die from AIDS secondary to contaminated blood transfusions prior to there being available treatment. People with HIV at that time were treated like lepers with others afraid to touch them or even breath the air around them. I see that similar fearful expression now when people give someone with a cough a wary glance. Anyways, TB alone would have been the better argument as it relates to proof of testing prior to boarding a plane. I’ll admit too that I don’t really care about what an airline may or may not do in this regard. If passengers don’t feel safe they won’t fly and airlines’ business will suffer. Many people in first world countries are sadly barely aware of TB anymore even though it infects a decent percentage of the world’s population.
I still don’t agree with this. Maybe I don’t understand what you mean, or maybe it’s semantics. A huge number of people are afflicted by these 3 diseases. TB in particular has been around for forever. COVID-19 is much more likely to come and go.
I do agree with this. We shouldn’t ignore COVID-19. We should be conscious of it all.
If we didn’t experience sickness and death from COVID-19, then 2020 would have looked a lot different. When we experience these diseases personally it is more powerful than any random number or emotionless science. I’ve intubated hundreds of patients that I mostly forget, but I can remember a handful vividly years later. When a loved one dies whether it is from AIDS or COVID-19, that experience changes you. That’s why I think experience matters. We can see the data and form opinions, but when it strikes close to home the opinions garner strength through feeling.