❦ Some thoughts and essays by Dr. Lisa Iannattone
Dr. Lisa Iannattone, Assistant Professor of Dermatology • 19 April 2025
“There’s nothing radical about clean air and compassion.”
Thoughts and essays by Dr. Lisa Iannattone.

❦ “Whenever I hear someone ask if we’re expected to continue masking in healthcare settings forever, I immediately think of Semmelweis – the man who discovered that healthcare workers’ dirty hands were causing fever and death in patients. The result of his discovery wasn’t the widespread implementation of hand hygiene though... Instead he was shunned, ostracized, lost his job and eventually institutionalized. It took around fifty years before the life-saving value of hand-washing was fully recognized in healthcare. Fifty years. It turns out that doctors didn’t take kindly to the idea that their own hands were unhygienic – and the source of disease and death for some of their patients. Despite the evidence, the denial was rampant and it was strong. The majority consensus was that Semmelweis was a crank... The resistance to the idea that the air we exhale while caring for patients can be unhygienic, and a source of illness and death for some, feels exactly the same to me. Despite the evidence, the denial is strong. Many prefer to cling to the status quo they knew before the pandemic. But that status quo was when we didn’t know better, and when we didn’t have such a virulent and dangerous new airborne pathogen in permanent circulation. Now that we do, and now that we know better, we should be willing to do better. So if the air we breathe can be unhygienic, and cause illness and death in our patients, and we know there’s a simple, effective solution – filtering it through a respirator – then it seems logical that this would become the new standard in our clinics, hospitals and long-term care facilities. Permanently. But as with Semmelweis’ experience, I expect that suggestion to get a lot of pushback, and for it to take a very long time for the medical field to accept that the old status quo is gone, and that masking in healthcare is the new normal. I just hope it won’t take another fifty years.”

❦ “Yesterday someone confronted me about my social media content – saying that while I’m not wrong, I’m too radical. They asked me: — “OK. What happens once everyone agrees (that Covid reinfections are problematic ) – then what?” Then we clean the air. HEPA filters are not radical. I don’t know what they expected as an answer. We regulate water safety and food safety in an effort to decrease population rates of waterborne and foodborne illnesses. Having clean air standards to lower the rates of respiratory illnesses isn’t radical. It’s also not radical to suggest we keep masking in healthcare and in essential indoor spaces so that the disabled, the high-risk, the elderly and their families can safely enjoy community life again. Wearing a respirator is not hard. Wearing 4-inch heels is hard, and I do that all the time for no good reason other than vanity. Accessibility is not radical. Advocating in favor of a public health response to an on-going threat is not extremism. SARS-CoV-2 is the Number One infectious-disease killer in Canada, and our excess deaths are still high. It’s not radical to think we should do something about it... It’s also not radical to advocate for the bare minimum in terms of public health education campaigns on Long Covid / Post-Covid Syndrome, and airborne transmission. Empowering people through education is not radical. It’s just wild for me that someone would think my Covid public health advocacy is radical when, in reality, they agree that we should clean the air, mask in healthcare and other essential places, and educate the public. Did they think I was going to answer with “lockdowns” ? Or is the radical part that I care enough to advocate out loud? Even when it’s not popular? Even when there’s an increasingly intense push to frame Covid health advocates as radicals and extremists? Or maybe I’m a radical because I don’t value brunch or maskless grocery shopping enough to risk Long Covid, or to betray my values? Is it radical that my physical health and my integrity are important enough to me that I’m at peace with my decision not to conform to societal expectations? If you’ve misclassified people you actually don’t disagree with as “radicals” in your mind, you should take half a second to examine how and why that happened, and re-examine your assumptions. There’s nothing radical about clean air and compassion. We don’t lack scientific consensus. The pandemic is complicated because we lack values consensus .”

❦ “I’m a little confused at the “making people feel bad about how their choices harm others is bad advocacy” takes. Didn’t we do that with smoking? Wasn’t the “second-hand smoke kills” education campaign exactly that? Isn’t “if you drive drunk, you could kill someone” exactly that? Since when is it controversial to point out how our choices could harm other people? Some people seem to think that advocacy should never make anyone feel uncomfortable… Do they really not realize that they’re out here shaming the oppressed for making their oppressors feel bad? We’ve created a system of structural violence against the immunocompromised, disabled, and clinically vulnerable. One that now extends to healthcare. We deserve to feel ashamed about it and we should always feel uncomfortable with perpetuating structural violence against others.”

❦ “The way I see it, if somehow all the data on the cumulative risk of death, hospitalisation, disability, heart attacks, strokes, etc. with repeat Covid infections turns out to be wrong, I will have worn a mask for longer than I needed to and missed a few social events. I’m OK with that. Whereas if I decided to follow the crowd instead of the available science, and the available data turns out to be right about the risks of cumulative Covid infections, then I’d be facing high odds of poor health, disability, and premature death. Those are very high stakes. When the stakes are high, you can’t afford to be wrong. So seeing ‘experts’ wave around the absence of certainty as their justification for choosing the high-stakes position, when the high-stakes position is the one that requires the most certainty… it’s just so absurd. On the other hand, I can pull up multiple scientific studies on how Covid (and the loss of parents/primary/secondary caregivers) harms children…”

❦ “I’m so pro-mask and anti-infection that I started masking in 2019. Why? Because I was pregnant and working in healthcare. And in the before-times, it was normal to try your best to avoid contracting pathogens in pregnancy. We didn’t worry about the (illegitimately-termed) “generational immunity debt”. I was doing it wrong – intermittent masking with leaky, blue surgical masks, haha – but I was masking every day because I was pregnant during RSV/flu season, and I was acutely aware that both of those viruses (and several others) could put both myself and the baby at risk. Pregnancy is a state of relative immunosuppression, and there’s research associating fever, regardless of the pathogen, to neurodevelopmental disorders. Pathogens are always unwelcome, but especially so in pregnancy. I picked up the idea of masking while pregnant as a med student during my pediatrics rotation. One of my attendings (supervising physician) was pregnant, and she masked to protect herself. It really bothered me. Not the mask. It bothered me that she and her baby had to be in harm’s way at all. Where I live, women that work in childcare get preventative leave during pregnancy because of the risk of contracting viral illnesses. Not doctors, though. So here was this pediatrician working specifically with young children who have viral illnesses, while she was pregnant. It seemed so unfair. It left me upset. But she was doing what she could to protect herself. Gloves. Scrubs. Hand hygiene. And a mask all day. With every patient. Even with us. So years later, when I was pregnant, I masked at work, too. I actively tried to avoid viral illness. After all, if I had a job in childcare, I’d be on preventative leave, right? So why would I expose my pregnant self to viruses in a healthcare setting, when doctors were taking women in other high-infectious-risk environments off work entirely? So anyway, imagine my utter shock when 2020 rolled around, and the “experts” started telling the population that masks don’t work. Remember that? — “Masks only protect others and not the wearer,” they said. That was the first lie in what we now know would be a long stream of lies. It was with that first lie that I understood that I needed to rely on myself, and not just the official messaging. That to keep my newborn safe, I would have to diligently double-check what we were being told. I knew I needed to find the truth-tellers among the “experts”. And this is not just about masks. Maybe the decision to mask in pregnancy wasn’t common pre-2020 – but looking out for each other absolutely was. In dermatology, we’d try to do the fever-plus-rash consults (and any other virus-risky consults) for pregnant colleagues. Why? Because why take unnecessary risks? Pathogens in pregnancy are bad. We’d often worry about the risk of the rash-plus-fever consult being measles or varicella. — “But aren’t you vaccinated?” Yes, and why take the risk? That was the mindset before the “vax-and-relax” lie. We got vaccinated against influenza in pregnancy as recommended, because we didn’t want to catch it – not so that we could go out and expose ourselves to it. We didn’t “vax and relax”. We “vaxxed and continued to actively avoid” . It was an easier task with the flu than it is with Covid, given how much less contagious flu is. With Covid, individual effort is insufficient. For it to be avoidable with small individual efforts, there needs to be not much of it circulating. Which would require a big Public Health project. So the deciders decided that that was not going to happen. We were going to live with infinite, forever Covid. But that would endanger so many people. So that’s when the “pandemic of the unvaccinated” lie was born. And the “Omicron is mild” lie. And the “Long Covid is rare” lie. Honestly, there are just so many lies that I can’t keep them all straight. We’re just constantly being “nudged” with nonsense messaging to get us to accept unmitigated exposure to SARS and other pathogens as normal. And it’s working. People seem even less cautious than they were before. We had crushed RSV and the flu, emptied pediatric hospitals, and had negative pediatric excess mortality. And we took zero lessons from that time forward with us. We figured out how to dramatically lower infant/childhood morbidity/mortality, and they made sure we unlearned it ASAP. They didn’t marvel at that achievement, and strive to do the non-disruptive stuff like cleaning the air and normalizing masks during the winter viral season. Instead, the “let a SARS virus mass-infect kids”, and the lies to normalize all the suffering that we’re seeing just keep on coming. See, that’s the problem with siding with the disinformers. Maybe you let the lies go because you agreed that kids shouldn’t have to wear masks for the benefit of “the vulnerable”. But now the disinformers are saying that society shouldn’t have to mask up for the safety of your kids, either. Siding with people that openly devalue the lives and right to safety of other human beings, because you are not personally in the devalued group, rarely ever goes well. And that’s the point of this essay. We’ve slowly and tragically slid down a slippery slope. This is nothing like 2019. In 2019 we would have cared that pediatric ICUs were overflowing, and worn masks to flatten the curve for kids. We’ve fallen so far since 2019. And with each passing day that our society can be convinced not to wear a mask to work – or in the mall, or on the bus – to prevent others from dying, or to keep babies out of the ICU, we slip a little further down the slope. And the scary thought is that this is very unlikely to be rock bottom. We still have further to fall.”

❦ Medical school lectures on respiratory pathogens in 2060: “Interestingly in the 1900s and early 2000s, doctors thought respiratory viruses were transmitted by fomites, not aerosols. They spent a tremendous amount of energy cleaning hands and surfaces instead of cleaning indoor air. Unsurprisingly, they were quite terrible at limiting the spread of respiratory viruses and had terrible epidemics each year leading to thousands of deaths, including many among infants and young children.” “Air hygiene has been one of the greatest public health advancements of the century.”

❦ “If you’re an MD [medical doctor] that spends time counseling patients to exercise and quit smoking in order to reduce their risk of a heart attack or stroke, and you haven’t yet added “Avoid Covid” to your ‘Cardiovascular risk factors’ counseling speech – you may want to re-evaluate that oversight.”

❦ “Immunity debt” is making the rounds again. So here’s my reminder that while there are viruses that are more severe if caught as a teen or adult (like polio or chickenpox), that isn’t the case for respiratory viruses . There’s a mortality benefit from first RSV and flu infections being delayed. So no, your toddler doesn’t need to catch all the viruses before the age of two to “build their immune system”. In fact, it’s the opposite: infants and young toddlers are more at risk of hospitalization and death from many respiratory viruses at their age than older children. You know how we’re asked not to give kids honey until they’re one? Or how Health Canada has a whole list of unsafe foods for kids under five? “ For many pathogens, kids are more susceptible to severe outcomes when they’re very young. ” And there is benefit to delaying exposure. This new (and very politically convenient) idea that it’s always best to catch pathogens very early in life “to build your immune system” can actually be quite dangerous when you take the time to think it all the way through. Stop blindly promoting “immunity debt” pseudoscience. Three years ago, I never would have believed that I’d one day see scientists and MDs [medical doctors] promoting the idea that it’s good for infants and young toddlers to be exposed to dangerous respiratory viruses like flu and RSV, instead of trying to delay those first infections – and yet here we are.”

❦ “It’s interesting to see people treat the statement “Catching Covid repeatedly until it kills you” as hyperbole. Covid is a leading cause of death across all ages. If nothing changes, then losing people we care about to Covid will be as common as cancer, heart disease or dementia. We’ve all lost loved ones to cancer, heart disease or dementia – but not all in the same year. The losses occurred over many years. Since Covid is still a brand new “leading cause of death” we don’t feel the full impact of this reality yet, but give it a few years and we will. If Covid remains a Top 3 leading cause of death going forward then inevitably, given enough time, “Catching Covid repeatedly until it kills you” will prove to be a true statement for a lot of people. It’s not as controversial a statement as some people would like to believe.”

❦ “When a weird new health issue arises globally after the West’s co-ordinated decision to allow mass infection of their countries’ populations with a novel, extremely pathogenic virus, it’s the height of intellectual dishonesty not to consider that novel virus as the prime suspect. I can’t believe we’re instead in a place where people get ridiculed and called conspiracy theorists for pointing out that Covid is the prime suspect. “LOL everything is Covid with you people” is a deflection tactic meant to silence rational people just pointing out the obvious. “But everyone caught Covid, are we going to blame every new health signal on Covid now?” Blame? No. Thoroughly and transparently investigate whether Covid is the cause or a contributing factor in the new global health issue? Yes. That’s how the aftermath of mass infection works.”
❂
Thoughts & essays by... Dr. Noor Bari

❦ “It’s not like I’ve never seen people die of causes that are a result of their lifestyle... but it’s awful seeing people die as a result of other people’s lifestyles... and now that includes their healthcare provider! It feels very similar to watching people die from another person’s drunk-driving... That’s the closest similar situation I can think of. We are drunk-driving in healthcare... with a pathogen that has a 10% fatality rate in that setting.”

❦ “In real life, no-one… and I mean no-one… is actually living a normal life if they have abandoned C-19 precautions. Either they are suffering the effects of illness themselves, are caring for someone that is sick, grieving, or all of the above. It’s not all people of one race/genotype either. It’s across a broad spectrum of people. It’s not even segregated by money. People with money that did not take it seriously enough to seek treatment have also fallen foul of problems. At this point in my social world the denial is being peeled away… and people are opening up about issues. However many still feel unable to prevent further problems. I’m seeing everything from acute COVID deaths to long COVID deaths. Every kind of autoimmune disease seems to be on the cards, colitis, hearing loss, joint problems… One common thread… people either have not made the connection to C-19, or think they are the odd one out. That they have somehow personally failed to be tough enough to weather the SARS storm. One can only congratulate the ghouls that have allowed that feeling to spread. I mean no-one I know… So all these people that I see on-and-off are living in their own quiet bubble of difficulty… and no-one is brave enough to tackle anything because no-one wants to be different… or perceived as a failure… or in many cases, they don’t know what to do anyway… This is a massive failure of public health. The anti-maskers are out on social media, loud and proud; public health departments barely whisper some diluted numbers once a week. Literally, things tick along “normally” in the conversation until you hit that bump. Ever since my last infection I _____. Fill in the blank. It’s often something that sounds really minor… but those that have read the data know what it really means. Quit the gym. Food is bland. Ringing in ears. Headaches. Joint pain. Stomach upset. Dizzy. Heart races. Tired. Stopped driving or stopped driving long distances. Quit the booze. Rashes. Keep getting xyz infections. Just going to tack on here that the first sentence contains an omission. “Real life” = People I know in real life. My real-life home village is sick or grieving or caring. Pretty much every household.”

❦ “Dear economy enthusiasts... The only humane way to avoid locking down for airborne disease control ever again is to set up safer indoor-air infrastructure... globally. Everyone that is slowing down this process is asking for another lockdown. Or mass murder. More likely another lockdown though because in the end, if bird flu takes off or MERS has an interesting offspring... the public will not stomach as much death as the anti-lockdown and dirty-air proponents would like.”

❦ “There is no such thing as “personal risk assessment” for the vast majority of people. A tiny number of dominant personalities in your life (and it could be you) have decided what to do, and the rest will follow. Even those that are making the decisions are not making a personal risk assessment. They are making a group risk assessment and taking their whole family/community with them. People may not even realise this – that they have made the decision on behalf of their entire household/class/company... but they have... If there is no responsible public health leadership, someone else is leading... because that is how we work, by and large, as a species. Someone is in charge... someone is always in charge, and unfortunately... misinformation is rife.”

❦ “No-one said life was gonna be easy. No-one said living through a pandemic was going to be easy. It’s all about what you think is important and worth fighting for. I chose health, lives, and sticking together. I chose to try to solve problems, not hide them. You can rewrite history. You can say that the mass overseas graves didn’t matter. You can say that we didn’t need to lock down in Australia in 2020 (when we had no PPE, no vaccines, and no therapeutics). I know different. I was there. Shed enough tears, attended enough zoom funerals… I know it wasn’t easy. I saw the tears when I said that a family on the breadline needed to isolate. I saw the heartbreak as I led a person away from their family, across the red line into the “red zone”. Even as I walked away from my family every day into the red zone, I felt your effort with me. When I said goodbye to my kid every day, and isolated away from my family to protect them from any accidental breaches... I know you all sacrificed too... ...and I was so grateful, and so proud... I wasn’t the one saving lives, you all were. You saved my life... I’m sure of it. We didn’t have enough PPE... Don’t ever forget that, and don’t let those bombastic characters writing rubbish articles about lockdown ever take that away from you.”

❦ “I’m vaguely following the chatter on the comparisons of COVID with HIV. I’ve never been a fan of this, because there are so many unanswered questions. One thing I am sure of. Research shows the immune system does get damaged. It does. Which bits? How much? Recovery? What opportunistic infections? Impact on global disease patterns? Impact on animal disease patterns (ecology and food-chain threats)? All questions that will be answered over time. No-one should be surprised by this. It should not be even vaguely controversial. Plenty of viruses damage the immune system . We will find out exactly the extent of the nature of COVID on this aspect of health. Another thing I can say with some certainty. Your chances of recovery from a depressed post-viral immune system will not be improved by further [SARS-CoV-2] infections. I can see a lot of people directly comparing COVID with HIV. Rest assured. I am concerned. I just don’t find that particular comparison helpful. As many have already pointed out, there are significant differences too. You don’t walk into the supermarket and catch a new strain of HIV starting a whole new acute infection every 6-8 months, for example. But there are also signs that some immune cells are recovering many months after infection too – then again, there are probably reservoirs in the body that could potentially continue to mutate, and then cause other pathology down the line – as some animal coronaviruses do. I think COVID is quite an interesting and horrible disease. I expect we will see what repeated infections really do as time goes on. Excess deaths are already through the roof. One last attempt to clarify. Trying to make COVID into either a cold, or HIV, and ending up with “half-way between” – when in reality COVID is doing 100% COVID, which is turning out to be really, really bad in its own right… and it’s airborne… and we are catching it all the time. That’s the part I find frustrating with this comparison. SARS is a dangerous, dangerous disease. It always has been. Both of them [SARS-1 and SARS-2] . Yes, there are threads of similarities, and we can use our wealth of knowledge to extrapolate possible outcomes, and test treatments… But SARS is not half-way to anything. It is, in itself, a giant problem.”

❦ “No. We haven’t gone back to normal. We have gone forward into abnormal. Really abnormal. Kill your elders abnormal. Douse the kids in viruses abnormal. Ignore and kill disabled people abnormal. Please go back to normal... because I don’t believe for a second that when you wake up and look in the mirror, that this is what you ever wanted to see looking back at you. It’s not too late.”

❦ — “How was your New Year?” — “S’ok...” Sad face... young adult person... “I got sick... kind of like a cold...” (But face says, “It ruined my New Year.”) So much is left unsaid. So many assumptions that everyone else is having fun – why not me? Guilt about being a let-down. (‘Am I not strong enough? My immunity not good enough?’) Others move on to chat about dining out at restaurants... This young person turns away, and continues to work. Isolated in her thoughts... How desperately I wanted to go over to her and say, “You are not alone...” But I’m a stranger, just passing... I think about how people in power are misleading and hurting young people. It’s deplorable.

❦ “COVID-19 causes lung fibrosis. It affects the immune system, and it causes liver fibrosis . COVID-19 causes brain inflammation and heart inflammation, strokes, heart attacks and large blood clots. COVID-19 causes diabetes . COVID-19 can cause kidney failure. I could go on... and on. Bone necrosis, joint pain, hair and teeth falling out. Do you normally expect a cold to make your teeth fall out ? Look up ‘lung fibrosis’ and ‘liver fibrosis’. Google them, and read about the complications. Read how patients that have these progressive diseases die. (Apologies to patients that already know.) Time and again, these patients have said to me (particularly when I was a young medical student): “Don’t do what I did.” “Don’t smoke.” “Alcohol is...” “I wish I had never...” “Save yourself...” Of those dying of infectious causes of lung and liver fibrosis: “Why me...?” “I wish I could have avoided that infection...” Stop. Stop as many COVID infections as you can. Stop now. Now is your chance to avoid treading these terrible paths. Once COVID has weakened your organs and immune system, every other pathogen – and even some environmental/commensal bugs – can move in... You will feel nothing wrong, nothing wrong, nothing wrong... then... the cascade of deterioration will snowball. Stop now while you are still in the “I feel nothing wrong” phase. There may well already be stuff wrong, but it’s better to try to stay in this phase than accelerate towards death any faster than is avoidable. No, not everyone will get every effect to the same extent, but macrophages do get activated by COVID (as well as other immune pathways and cells). Some of the inflammation in the body has been observed for months. That is a recipe for damage and fibrosis. I wrote this after hearing – again and again – “I have a cough, it just won’t budge, and it’s not COVID”. I don’t know what's causing all the coughing. Could be anything... but this is one of the ways I would expect widespread prevalence of lung damage to present. It’s also one of the ways I would expect chronic infections with slow-growing pathogens (like TB or atypical pneumonias) to present... Chronic coughs can also have other malignant or serious causes. These should be assessed and monitored by a GP if it’s not budging. Please... try to look after yourselves.. .”

❦ “Lymphopenia is present during and after some viral infections, and this also varies between individuals. It is very transient in most cases, and by that I mean a couple of weeks. The viruses that cause longer derangement are already known to be associated with long-term immune system derangement – including secondary infections, immune amnesia and cancers. COVID-19 lymphopenia has been recorded present for months. COVID-19 has been found to destroy (engulf in syncytia), directly infect, stimulate, and suppress a lot of white-cell function. Reinfections are frequent. Secondary infections/reactivations observed. It’s a huge worry. As a general rule, efforts are made to control/treat viruses that cause prolonged immune system derangement. COVID-19 is wildly exceptional in that we are ignoring it, pretending the lymphocytes bounce back like after a cold, and are frequently infecting people with it. We are also losing naive lymphocytes in large numbers due to superantigen stimulation. This is very different to transient suppression of peripheral blood lymphocytes due to cytokines or migration. This is another example of people making assumptions (huge and wrong), based on entirely dissimilar pathogens. It’s very important to look at what happens in similar situations, such as post-other-super-antigen-carrying infections. (Nothing good.) I could have saved my energy today and just let everyone play with a super antigen and find out… but sadly, the people finding out the hardest lessons are not the people deciding to play with it. So… here we are…”

❦ “This morning someone said to me: — “I just can’t shake this... first a chest infection, and now a urine infection...” Someone else I know (very close) has had three eye infections post-COVID. Another has had a deterioration in their fertility, as compared to their baseline pre- and post-COVID. Measured. It’s almost as if the stuff in the science papers is real. None of them have twigged that COVID might have toasted them yet either. They are all heading into this next wave with no idea how dangerous it might be to abuse their already struggling immune system like this. You know what’s coming next... Multi-drug-resistant bacteria. Many are already here, but this is going to get really out of control. Trying to treat infections in immunodeficient patients is a great way to make loads of drug-resistant bacteria and viruses.” ✾ 📖 (24 Sep 2025 ~ CIDRAP/University of Minnesota) Outpatient antibiotic use in COVID patients linked to 'downstream' antibiotic resistance ➤ 📖 (15 Jul 2025 ~ UKHSA: News story) UTIs [Urinary Tract Infections] cost NHS hospitals over £600m last year ➤ 📖 (26 Jun 2025 ~ Forbes) Cancer Patients Face Silent Crisis From Superbugs, New Research Shows ➤ 📖 (12 Dec 2024 ~ CIDRAP/University of Minnesota) Report describes spread of highly drug-resistant cholera strain ➤ 📖 (1 Nov 2024 ~ China CDC Weekly) Emergence of a New Sublineage of Candida auris Causing Nosocomial Transmissions - Beijing Municipality, China, March-September 2023 ➤ 📖 (17 May 2024 ~ CIDRAP/University of Minnesota) Global Meta-analysis estimates 43% rate of multidrug resistance in COVID patients ➤ 📖 (14 May 2024 ~ Journal of Infection) Global antimicrobial resistance and antibiotic use in COVID-19 patients within health facilities: A systematic review and meta-analysis of aggregated participant data ➤ 📖 (24 May 2023 ~ Current Microbiology) Interaction Between SARS-CoV-2 and Pathogenic Bacteria ➤ 📖 (18 Apr 2023 ~ BMC Infectious Diseases) Fungal infection profile in critically ill COVID-19 patients: a prospective study at a large teaching hospital in a middle-income country ➤ 📖 (29 Mar 2023 ~ Journal of Fungi) Fungal-Bacterial Co-Infections and Super-Infections among Hospitalized COVID-19 Patients: A Systematic Review ➤ 📖 (30 Sep 2021 ~ Business Insider) Drug-resistant infections in the US have risen sharply during the pandemic, and experts warn it's getting worse as COVID patients overwhelm hospital resources ➤

❦ “During my young and ‘indestructible’ days, I did a lot of risky things. I now have a dodgy ankle, and various other aches and pains to remind me... Young people these days will also accumulate their scars of youth... but in my opinion, the COVID scars were unnecessary. We could have made it so much safer to travel and have fun by controlling disease properly. We gave up on them, our youth. We left them last for vaccines, and last for any consideration of their needs. They can’t even date properly without excess risk of long-term health problems because we can’t be bothered to do the work. Dating and finding a partner is a need , by the way. Sure, there are ways around this… but realistically, zero COVID would have been for them. The young. People think it’s to protect the old... but that’s only a small part of the story! Zero COVID would have given our kids safer schools. Parties would be safer. Sport would be safer, and they could excel without fear of COVID ruining their goals. We should have done it for the kids. See what I mean. We have misguided and abandoned them.”

❦ “What are we going to tell young men in twenty years’ time if they discover that they can’t ever have an erection in the usual manner due to repeated childhood COVID infections? Have we thought about using vaccines and therapeutics in children to prevent this? What about protecting children with NPIs ( non-pharmaceutical interventions )? We all worry about kids missing out on fun stuff in this pandemic. What about their sexual health later in life? Is this not fun? Is this not important? Is this not for them ? Let’s not be squeamish. Let’s think this through properly. Our youth are being repeatedly infected with a pathogen that we know affects sexual and reproductive health in a myriad of ways. Due to the fact that I will likely be dead by the time you figure this out, I’m going to take the liberty of saying a few things now. 1) This is unacceptable. 2) I told you so. 3) I’m sorry future adults, I really tried. I hope that solutions come your way.”

❦ “COVID-19 is fighting back by generally depressing the whole adaptive immune system. We are showing narrow resilience to COVID reinfections due to adapting – but we are becoming more vulnerable in general to infections of all kinds. ❦ Worst case scenario A single infection causes on-going and progressive immunodeficiency . ❦ Best case scenario A single infection causes temporary immunosuppression , and we suppress COVID transmission enough to allow recovery. ❦ Most likely scenario, medium-term Immunosuppression that becomes continuous and possibly progressive due to reinfections. Reduced immune function after a viral infection is not unusual. Many viruses do this. The concerning issue is the length and breadth of the immune system dysfunction, coupled with emerging evidence of other pathogens taking advantage .” ✾ ❦ Immunosuppression ~ Suppression of the immune system and its ability to fight infection. ❦ Immunodeficiency ~ A state in which the immune system’s ability to fight infectious diseases and cancer is compromised, or entirely absent.

❦ “I graduated from UCL. It has changed a lot since I was there. The ability to prioritise actions in an emergency is my job. You have to do things in the right order, or none of it works. We need COVID control, so we can free up resources to do other work. I don’t just mean health resources either. Depletion of workers due to sick leave; long-term illness; carer duties; and death – with some jobs becoming frankly undesirable. The expected benefits of ventilation and masks in essential services would be to reduce Reff * and save lives. * Reff , or the effective transmission number , is a measure used to indicate how many people, on average, a single infected person will transmit a disease to. A Reff value above 1 suggests that the infection is spreading , while a value below 1 indicates that the outbreak is declining . How much… you have to do it to find out, because it hasn’t been done before. We have to build this plane while flying. No room for excess baggage. Small case studies (like individual schools, or wards in a hospital ) indicate the benefit might be quite a lot. Even if it’s not as much as hoped, it has to be done, because we are rapidly accumulating long-term sickness. We have to try everything to slow that process.”

❦ “So, we want to “live with the virus”. Is there any evidence of this occurring successfully anywhere? Yes! In bats... and it has taken 64 million years of evolution to get there. To “live with the virus”, bats have better host defences – they don’t overdo inflammation, and they can get rid of toxic compounds and deal with reactive oxygen species much better than humans. They literally live with the virus .

❦ “I think it would be good if people stop asking family members of vulnerable people when they will unmask and go on holiday… and what their off-ramp is. Like… is “off-ramp” code for bumping off the vulnerable person in the household? Exit strategy via coffin? The faster everyone accepts that some of us can’t even go to a dentist without a risk-benefit analysis, let alone a dinner party, the happier we will all be. Do I walk around asking you about your personal choice not to mask? What makes you think you can ask me why I do mask? I know that tone says you aren’t actually interested in the answer. Let it go. No, no… I don’t have to learn to “live my life again”. I am living my life the way I have always lived my life. With due respect for myself and others.”

❦ “Let’s play pretend. Pretend we have unlimited resources to staff the hospitals. Unlimited ICU beds. We let COVID-19 take its natural course. COVID-19 would average, what? Two or three infections per person, per year? Let’s be conservative. Let’s say you get COVID-19 once a year. So once a year, a certain proportion of all human beings, except those in countries with good COVID control will: die; have reproductive difficulties like erectile dysfunction; get heart failure; lose the pleasure of the smell and taste of food; have new autoimmune issues; develop new cognitive issues; have vascular problems like strokes; suffer other organ damage, like kidney failure; receive a new diagnosis of diabetes. Etc. Each of these has a percentage prevalence in cases. Some of those numbers are not small. Each time, there will be people that get one or more of these issues. Each of those conditions has their own associated increase in mortality. Then there is the drop in productivity and quality of life. How long do you think it would be before the majority of the population has something not quite right with them due to COVID-19? I don’t think it would take all that long. Ten years maybe? Twenty? How can it possibly be a sane public health strategy to have hospitalisation and ICU capacity preservation as the goal of a nation, when the obvious and massive loss of health (and life) due to circulating COVID can be predicted already? Some years, we will not have a great match between vaccines and circulating strains (such as Omicron); other years we will get it right (maybe if we are fast enough, and we aren’t yet). What does that mean? There will be multiple episodes in the future where vaccine-mediated cover and infection-mediated immunity will not be great. That means the organ damage will be somewhat more severe. Why are public health officials OK with this? Even if we can never get back to zero COVID, why are they OK with having a high frequency of infections per lifetime? Am I in an alternate universe where I can see these studies and they can’t? We have therapeutics coming in, so that will help, but they aren’t 100% magic bullets either. People need a combination of factors to bounce through a COVID infection without noticeable effects (although kidney damage can present late). That combination, to be maintained at all times for an individual is difficult, let alone a population. The strategy of “Living with COVID-19” is fatally flawed. That flaw is the fact that COVID-19 is a rapidly mutating virus that causes irreversible, or slowly reversible damage to the human body. We can’t actually withstand it for our usual natural lifetimes. The government must show the modelling for long-term health outcomes for their “living with the virus” plans. The economic impact of the same. All the colleges of medicine should submit their modelling on how COVID-19 is affecting human health. This is critically important work. How a biohazard was allowed into Australia and allowed to circulate – without modelling its overall impact on human health – is a matter that should be investigated thoroughly. It was a huge decision. There should have been expert discussion and documentation. No… Saying “We didn’t know” is not good enough. If you don’t know… Don’t play with SARS.”








