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❦ 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.
© 2022 Dr. Lisa Iannattone ➲
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