Listen to the Virus
It will dictate our future
Once again, we are at a life-threatening crossroads. After fits and starts in the battle to contain COVID-19, we finally saw state and federal governments agree to a plan to slow the spread of this deadly virus through aggressive treatment of those who become ill from it, school and business closings, restrictions on large public gatherings and enforced physical distancing requirements. There is little doubt that the rate of infection increases has gone down, hospitalizations are starting to level off and the death rate among those infected is slowing down.
These measures, popularly called STAY AT HOME orders, are working and lives are being saved as a result.
As with all pandemics, the measures needed to beat them come with a staggering economic cost. More Americans are out of work now than we saw during the Great Depression. Businesses are closed and many will never reopen. Savings have been depleted. Investments have taken a substantial hit. People are clamoring for help. Food banks cannot keep up with the demand. Stimulus checks and unemployment benefits will help some and cannot come soon enough.
Besides the economic toll, government services and quality of life programs are being curtailed. Some see individual liberties being curtailed. Protests by some of those aggrieved by the orders closing parks and businesses are springing up here and around the country.
We must choose how we will move forward. Do we continue the stay at home orders, keep non-essential businesses shuttered, keep schools closed and require physical distancing to protect lives? Do we heed the calls to re-open the economy, put Americans back to work and risk more deaths?
It is at this cross-roads where our political divide rears up once more.
On Thursday afternoon, President Trump retreated from his earlier proclamation that he would be the one to decide when to re-open the country. Instead, he finally listened to his scientific advisors and legal team and recognized that the nation’s governors should be making the decisions about when to re-open their individual state economies based upon the conditions presented. He offered a reasoned plan for all to follow on how such decisions should be made.
First, we need to look at the rates of infection, hospitalizations and deaths. Are they going up, down or staying level? As long as the rates continue to rise or stay high, economies should stay closed and physical distancing enforced.
Second, with declining rates of infection, hospitalization and death, we need to ramp up our ability to test people to see if they are infected. Without testing, we will be operating blindfolded and if infection rates start going back up, we will not know it until it shows up in increased hospitalizations. Then, it will be too late.
Third, with any economic re-opening and lessened restrictions on physical distancing, the chances of a new wave of infection and death will go up substantially. We must rebuild or hospital capacity to be able to handle any new wave. That means more hospital beds, more protective equipment for healthcare workers and first responders and more ventilators and other life sustaining medical equipment.
Fourth, we need to develop and test the efficacy of a vaccine to inoculate the public from contracting the virus in the first place. This will, by most scientific measures, take the better part of a year.
Under the President’s guidelines, governors can slowly re-open their state’s economies as they are able to meet each of the listed benchmarks in turn. Some states have been hit harder by the pandemic than others and will be slower to reopen than those with fewer infected citizens.
Governor Evers also spoke about these issues on Thursday. He too recognized that a slow, measured response to the virus threat was needed to protect Wisconsin citizens as much as possible. Evers will not be throwing a switch to re-open Wisconsin, but will use a dial to lessen restrictions as the benchmarks are reached. It will take time.
For starters, Gov. Evers extended his stay at home order until just after Memorial Day, May 26. The need for the extension is manifest and is in keeping with President Trump’s guidelines. He will allow some businesses to reopen under physical distancing guidelines and offering limited services.
Unfortunately, the republican leaders in our legislature do not see fit to follow their President and Governor. Senate Majority Leader Scott Fitzgerald and Assembly Majority Leader Robin Vos both signaled Thursday that they would pull out the stops to pass measures to end Evers’ orders. They seem hell bent on putting Wisconsin back to work and letting the lives of the vulnerable in the balance fall where they may. This is at least consistent with their efforts to force people to vote in the last election during the pandemic, making many choose between their right to vote and the risk of contracting a deadly disease. We know how that turned out.
Now is the time for restraint and listening to the scientists. As Dr. Anthony Fauci, President Trump’s advisor on infectious diseases, said recently, “the virus will tell us when to re-open the country.” We ignore it’s call at our peril.
Onward Together
Saturday, April 18, 2020
Saturday, April 4, 2020
Look for the Helpers
Look for the Helpers
Kindnes goes a long way
My wife and I are in our middle to late 70s and have health issues, putting us in the high-risk category for contracting and dying from the Covid-19 virus. We have been staying and working from home since the middle of March to avoid exposure. This has necessitated interesting changes to our routines.
We have always been social people who love to be in contact with our friends and family. I even strike up conversations with strangers in places like the grocery store, just to increase sociability. The government has urged “social distancing” to flatten the curve of exposure to the virus. We found that to be a misnomer. We use “physical distancing” instead, keeping at least six feet between us and others when we do go out.
We have learned to keep up contact with our friends and family using technology. We love making and receiving phone calls. We use Facetime and other video conferencing platforms for virtual dinners and happy hours. Meetings for work are now audio or audiovisual and work just fine. Seeing the grandkids laugh and hearing them sing or play their instruments on a computer screen or iPhone is not as good as it would be in-person, but suffices in these uncertain times.
Shopping has also been interesting. I usually shop for the groceries for us. I miss the time spent cruising the aisles looking for new culinary experiences and speaking with others doing the same. When we first shuttered in, I used the pick-up services at Pick N Save and Sendiks. They worked very well initially, but the time between placing the order and being able to pick it up has now increased to over a week. Luckily, our local Piggly Wiggly has a wonderful volunteer, out of work at a local public school, who will shop for us and deliver the food to our garage on the same or next day after I email her my order. She has been a great help and I try to just call on her service once a week so she has time for other orders for those like us who have self-quarantined.
I have also ordered more things on-line, mostly through Amazon. Hand sanitizer ingredients and coffee pods in bulk are now shipped directly to a bin on our front porch. So are books for the avid reader next to me on the couch.
We are mailing more as well. We’re getting drawings and other refrigerator art from the grandkids. Videos of past concerts also come by mail. Letters from friends checking in come as well. We used the mail to send postcards to potential voters as part of the new campaign methods of voter contact have emerged.
Dining out was always a treat for us and we loved to patronize our favorite local pubs and eateries. Now we do take out or curbside pick-up from these local businesses to try and help them weather the storm and take a break from cooking and dishes.
My work as a guardian for the elderly, most with dementia, has been curtailed significantly. I would normally visit my wards in the facilities where they live to check in on them, review medical records and speak with caregivers. With the pandemic, all assisted living and nursing facilities have banned outside visitors, except for medically necessary ones, so I cannot visit in-person. That means family cannot visit their loved ones either. I have switched to email and phone contact with facility staff to keep up with the condition of my wards and have picked up more contact with their family members as I relay changes in visiting rules and health conditions.
Through all of these changes, we have found that the people involved are going above and beyond to take care and be kind. Civility is on the increase as folks realize that we are all in this mess together and it will take each of us maintaining our “physical distance” for the contagion curve to flatten.
I, and many others, are grateful for the helpers who have stepped up to help us survive. Let’s work to continue the kindness once this pandemic passes.
Kindnes goes a long way
My wife and I are in our middle to late 70s and have health issues, putting us in the high-risk category for contracting and dying from the Covid-19 virus. We have been staying and working from home since the middle of March to avoid exposure. This has necessitated interesting changes to our routines.
We have always been social people who love to be in contact with our friends and family. I even strike up conversations with strangers in places like the grocery store, just to increase sociability. The government has urged “social distancing” to flatten the curve of exposure to the virus. We found that to be a misnomer. We use “physical distancing” instead, keeping at least six feet between us and others when we do go out.
We have learned to keep up contact with our friends and family using technology. We love making and receiving phone calls. We use Facetime and other video conferencing platforms for virtual dinners and happy hours. Meetings for work are now audio or audiovisual and work just fine. Seeing the grandkids laugh and hearing them sing or play their instruments on a computer screen or iPhone is not as good as it would be in-person, but suffices in these uncertain times.
Shopping has also been interesting. I usually shop for the groceries for us. I miss the time spent cruising the aisles looking for new culinary experiences and speaking with others doing the same. When we first shuttered in, I used the pick-up services at Pick N Save and Sendiks. They worked very well initially, but the time between placing the order and being able to pick it up has now increased to over a week. Luckily, our local Piggly Wiggly has a wonderful volunteer, out of work at a local public school, who will shop for us and deliver the food to our garage on the same or next day after I email her my order. She has been a great help and I try to just call on her service once a week so she has time for other orders for those like us who have self-quarantined.
I have also ordered more things on-line, mostly through Amazon. Hand sanitizer ingredients and coffee pods in bulk are now shipped directly to a bin on our front porch. So are books for the avid reader next to me on the couch.
We are mailing more as well. We’re getting drawings and other refrigerator art from the grandkids. Videos of past concerts also come by mail. Letters from friends checking in come as well. We used the mail to send postcards to potential voters as part of the new campaign methods of voter contact have emerged.
Dining out was always a treat for us and we loved to patronize our favorite local pubs and eateries. Now we do take out or curbside pick-up from these local businesses to try and help them weather the storm and take a break from cooking and dishes.
My work as a guardian for the elderly, most with dementia, has been curtailed significantly. I would normally visit my wards in the facilities where they live to check in on them, review medical records and speak with caregivers. With the pandemic, all assisted living and nursing facilities have banned outside visitors, except for medically necessary ones, so I cannot visit in-person. That means family cannot visit their loved ones either. I have switched to email and phone contact with facility staff to keep up with the condition of my wards and have picked up more contact with their family members as I relay changes in visiting rules and health conditions.
Through all of these changes, we have found that the people involved are going above and beyond to take care and be kind. Civility is on the increase as folks realize that we are all in this mess together and it will take each of us maintaining our “physical distance” for the contagion curve to flatten.
I, and many others, are grateful for the helpers who have stepped up to help us survive. Let’s work to continue the kindness once this pandemic passes.
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