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Woot's avatar

It is a pleasure to hear from a doctor with the grace to show some humility. This is something that was sorely missing during the past 3 years. Even today in the comments on this site you see MDs essentially saying “Shut-up you ignorant plebe. You have no medical training how can you dare question what you have been told by your betters.” Many of the things we did in the panic at the onset of the pandemic was contrary to common sense and past experience. These included a lack of consideration for natural immunity, universal masking (with cloth masks?), no consideration for the age of patient, pursuit of universal vaccination during a pandemic for a fast evolving respiratory virus, quarantine of the healthy, etc. The medical profession has taken a big hit to its credibility, when we needed our medical professionals to be rational and reasonable they responded with outright panic and irrationality. I would caution doctors not to take their patients polite nature and desire to move on as acquiescence and agreement. One only has to look at the complete collapse of Covid vaccination rates while the overwhelming majority of medical professionals were still advocating vaccination and boosting to see that many patients recognized the folly of the advice they received and made their own decisions. Also, look at the declining rates for all vaccination or polling of the public showing significant decline in trust for the medical community. I feel badly for the doctors who stepped out and tried to advocate for their patients only to be slandered by their peers and threatened by their professional organizations and employers. However, there were far too few doctors and other medical professionals who did so. What went wrong in the medical profession that allowed this situation to occur?

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Mark Storer's avatar

I appreciate your take on this but I must admit it leaves me with questions--As your colleague Vinay Prasad has posited, masks don't work in situations like these. No data supports that. So why would it be praise-worthy that people made more of them? Ventilators too turned out to be problematic as nearly everyone that was put on one (my own mom included) did not survive that experience. So why should it be praiseworthy that we allowed our government to convince companies to drop what they were doing and make more?

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