Thursday, February 13, 2020

Plague or PITA?



I’m still trying to figure out my feelings about the coronavirus. Should I be concerned, worried, or frightened? The media reports usually preface “coronavirus” with “deadly.” This is a flu, and all flus are deadly. The death rate for this is still under 3 percent, but the hard number of those who have died of coronavirus is higher than that for SARS.

It would be useful if we had a Richter scale for this. For example, if the Spanish Flu of 1918, which killed 50 million people, was a 9, and SARS, let’s say, was a 4 or a 5, what do we give this new one?  Too simple, I guess.

Then there is the name. “Coronavirus” isn’t specific enough. We don’t use animals anymore, The swine flu was a death sentence for pigs. A geographic name causes travel and commerce issues and even racial profiling – and can also be wrong. The Spanish Flu did not start in Spain. So now they have neutral designations, and for this one, it’s COVID-19.

In this country, it's already starting. What do I mean by "it"? I heard that some ride-hailing drivers here are starting to avoid picking up Asians. But it goes beyond that. I myself was shopping in a big-box store and suddenly had to sneeze. I covered my nose and mouth, but when I looked up, I found a woman glaring at me. Some checkout clerks in that store had masks on. In China, many are wearing masks, and those who don’t are socially unacceptable. The masks keep sneezes in and other people’s cooties out. The door is wide open to blame, as in, you gave this to me, or you’re going to give it to me.

There are people who were just in the wrong place at the wrong time, and have been  trapped on cruise ships or military bases because they might be carrying the disease. For those cleared to  return to their lives, how many party invitations will they be getting for a while?

Hopefully, science will answer the technical questions. Genetic researchers are zeroing in on what is common to all viruses and doesn’t mutate, which could lead to an all-inclusive vaccine someday. But in the meantime, we have to sort out the information in front of us that we accept and our own feelings about it, then decide how we will interact with others before COVID-19 becomes a “thing” here. It just might.

1 comment:

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