COVID: It's Time to be Outspoken

Turning the tide on COVID with our voices. Nurses COVID Article

I Am Sick of this Virus

To say that I am sick of COVID-19 is an understatement. Thankfully I haven’t been physically sick from COVID-19 but the mental anguish has been significant. It’s been a year and a half of uncertainty, fear, isolation, anxiety, grief and frustration. I’m sure some of you are quite familiar with these feelings. 

Right now my overarching emotion is disappointment. I am disappointed that we are still living through this pandemic. I am disappointed that our country is divided on how to best handle the virus. I am also disappointed that so many people are rejecting facts and beneficence in favor of misinformation and self-interest. This is dangerous territory.

When did people start renouncing what is scientifically proven to be best for the whole in exchange for what “might” be best for them personally? How did upholding personal freedoms become more noble than ensuring the safety of the masses? 

Recently I read a quote that really stuck with me and seems wholly applicable to our current situation. 

The Cherokee elder Stan Rushworth said, “The difference between a Western settler mindset of ‘I have rights’ and an indigenous mindset of ‘I have an obligation’ is instead of thinking that I am born with rights, I choose to think I was born with an obligation to serve past, present and future generations, and the planet herself”.

These are powerful words that mirror the split happening over Coronavirus.

66% is a D. That's too Close to Failing.

I had assumed that the vast majority of people would be of the “obligation” mindset but my assumption is inaccurate. According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, 66% of Americans age 12 and older - those eligible for the vaccine - are fully vaccinated. I’m not comforted by this percentage rate; it feels much too low for such an unpredictable, deadly virus. Are four out of ten people okay rolling the dice on this one?

I have to wonder how people have lived through the same past 20 months as me but have chosen not to vaccinate, not to mask up, and not to protect themselves and their loved ones from COVID. How are they so confident they’ll survive? How do they not fear inadvertently killing another human being? Were they not watching the same news as me - of tractor trailer trucks lined up on city streets, acting as mobile morgues because the hospitals were too full of dead bodies? That haunting image alone was enough to make me think the vaccine was worth getting.

Towards the beginning of the pandemic, I remember watching footage of nurses in NYC walking into their hospitals with neighborhood residents cheering and banging pots and pans together from their apartment balconies in a show of support and love. I hoped these same people showing their support outwardly and loudly were doing what was needed behind the scenes: quietly getting their vaccinations without fanfare. I hoped they were doing what was necessary to actually prove their allegiance to those fighting on the hospitals’ front lines.

What Can We Do?

As nurses, we can help turn the tide of COVID by educating our patients and peers on the dangers of misinformation and the vital importance of doing all we can to stop the spread. We can disseminate factual knowledge to those who need it, loudly. It’s our obligation to set the record straight and offer evidence-based research to those who may be getting their news from less-than-reliable sources. 

It’s Our Time to Be Outspoken. Lives Are On the Line.

We can spread the facts at our patients’ beside, to their visitors, on social media, and to our anti-vax friends and family. We can volunteer at vaccination clinics. We can tell real-life, modern horror stories of how intubation works or how organs shut down due to this disease. It’s time to scare people straight. 

We can sport a cheery “I’m Vaccinated!” pin and wear masks in public, even when not mandated. We can run for the school board and help influence safety measures in our children's classrooms. We can help organize transportation to local pharmacies for citizens who may not be able to get to a vaccination site otherwise. There’s a hundred other ways we can do good work and keep people safe.

Over the past 20 months we’ve established that healthcare professionals are heroes. Let’s continue to do heroic things, not just with our skilled hands, but with our loud, determined voices. Make yours heard. 


References

One Year In: COVID-19 and Mental Health

We Are All Related: A Conversation with Stan Rushworth

COVID-19 Vaccinations in the United States

Specializes in Public Health, TB.
5 hours ago, offlabel said:

Google it..I guess?

https://www.letmegooglethat.com/#previewsearchbox

https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/34341797/

Conclusions: Myocarditis (or pericarditis or myopericarditis) from primary COVID19 infection occurred at a rate as high as 450 per million in young males. Young males infected with the virus are up 6 times more likely to develop myocarditis as those who have received the vaccine.

Specializes in Hospice, corrections, psychiatry, rehab, LTC.

When did people start renouncing what is scientifically proven to be best for the whole in exchange for what “might” be best for them personally?

This sums the whole thing up in one sentence. The people who are yelling about personal freedom are the ones who believe that they ought to be able to do whatever they want, and they don't care who they may infect or kill in the process. If this kind of mentality was prevalent years ago, we would still be dealing with smallpox and widespread tuberculosis.

People of this ilk seem to latch onto any theory that reinforces their opinion, whether or not it is accurate. I was participating in a thread on AN in which an RN (or at least she presented herself as such) was advocating inhaling hydrogen peroxide to cure COVID. Hydrogen peroxide is one of the most thoroughly studied treatments around, and it is widely known to destroy healthy tissue. Efficacy against the virus aside (it has some, but only on environmental surfaces), you could wind up on a vent because you have been inhaling this stuff and destroying your lungs from the inside.

7 hours ago, offlabel said:

So... sarcasm...got it. This is what the conversation has been reduced to. Insulting polemics. For so many it's more about being right than addressing the reality in peoples lives. 

Nope.  Not sarcastic.

"I don't worry about people that aren't wearing a mask because I'm vaccinated."

"If a teenager has more of a chance of getting myocarditis from the vaccine than with the actual infection, a decision not to be vaccinated would seem rational."

I wish I was shocked at this level of ignorance from a nurse.

And, before you think I am being insulting- I m not.  I mean it in it very literally.

Ignorant :"lacking knowledge or comprehension of the thing specified"

You are, in fact,  lacking knowledge or comprehension of the thing specified.  

 

1 hour ago, Orca said:

I was participating in a thread on AN in which an RN (or at least she presented herself as such) was advocating inhaling hydrogen peroxide to cure COVID. Hydrogen peroxide is one of the most thoroughly studied treatments around, and it is widely known to destroy healthy tissue. Efficacy against the virus aside (it has some, but only on environmental surfaces), you could wind up on a vent because you have been inhaling this stuff and destroying your lungs from the inside.

I remember when I was a newer nurse I had a patient who had been treating himself for lymphoma with a regimen of increasing daily drops of ingested peroxide. It was one of those moments you never forget, I went into the room to get him admitted and there he stood wearing loose clothing and just had huge bulges everywhere. So in addition to whatever damage he may have done, it also did not seem to have helped his lymphoma.

Specializes in Critical Care.
13 hours ago, offlabel said:

Rational, measured calm conversations about good decision making. If a teenager has more of a chance of getting myocarditis from the vaccine than with the actual infection, a decision not to be vaccinated would seem rational. If admission to the hospital would be likely if a particular person got infected, vaccination would seem rational. If you don't want to get sick, get vaccinated. Take care of everyone else.  By now, everyone will have made a decision. Polemics are just not necessary and they make matters worse. 

I think a lot of the pushback to your hypothetical scenario (I'm hoping it was hypothetical) is that many may interpret it as being a claim of facts.

The risk of myocarditis in teens is clearly higher from a Covid infection than from the vaccine, that taking the reported risk at face value.  But that's just looking at myocarditis, overall the risk of Covid is inarguably greater than the vaccine for teenagers.  Overall though, it's not comparable, risk of harm from Covid infection is significantly greater than risk of harm from the vaccine.

The problem with these supposedly hypothetical scenarios is that people might misinterpret them as being true, and as a result choose not to be vaccinated because they falsely believe that is the decision that is most likely to prevent them from harm.

In addition, your previous implication that the worst thing an otherwise healthy person in their 30's will experience from a Covid infection is mild symptoms is a bit reckless.  Our Covid ICU is full of people in their 30's who correctly pointed out that they had characteristics that didn't make them high risk, yet they pretty much all end up dead or wishing they had actually died.  Again, the suggestion that in general people in their 30's, regardless of health history, are better off unvaccinated rather than vaccinated is wildly reckless.

Specializes in Specializes in L/D, newborn, GYN, LTC, Dialysis.
13 hours ago, offlabel said:

Google it..I guess?

No, wrong answer. Provide reliable, peer-reviewed evidence please.

This is a nursing board not facebook.

"Continual  non-confrontational discussion allaying fears can work". 

I will discuss with my patients as part of my job. For my own sanity, I am done discussing with friends and family. I now refer them to their PCPs for recommendations. Everyone has chosen a side and is dug in.

Nursemedic74: Thank you for posting your experience for those of us who haven't seen many symptomatic patients the past 18 months.

"There has always been a reason to separate the people in our country and this I just one more reason".

If you have a chance, search for Simon Sinek's podcast interview with Brene Brown (titled "A Bit of Optimism"). They discuss the human race's need to pick sides. Since the Berlin wall came down, we've needed a new enemy. The enemy is now each other. 

Specializes in NICU, PICU, Transport, L&D, Hospice.
1 hour ago, 2BS Nurse said:

Nursemedic74: Thank you for posting your experience for those of us who haven't seen many symptomatic patients the past 18 months.

"There has always been a reason to separate the people in our country and this I just one more reason".

If you have a chance, search for Simon Sinek's podcast interview with Brene Brown (titled "A Bit of Optimism"). They discuss the human race's need to pick sides. Since the Berlin wall came down, we've needed a new enemy. The enemy is now each other. 

Propagandists have always pitted people against people.  It's a matter of history and learning from it...

@toomuchbaloney History has proven that we never learn. I don't think it's possible for the human race.

On 10/21/2021 at 11:27 AM, toomuchbaloney said:

That's what I thought...it's just another bit of crap thrown about without any evidence to support it.  Maybe you don't realize that you made the claim and therefore it's you who needs to Google up that supporting data which influenced your thinking.  Or you could just admit that this is thinking that you developed while reading your social media feed that's filled with vaccine nonsense and "sympathy" for hesitancy.

I wouldn't call it made up.  As the whole thing about facebook and algorithms has unfolded it's a bit more clear how confirmation bias is reinforced by internet "research".  

This can be a sincerely held belief, and to those who believe it, it is a real as reality is to the rest of the world.  

 

Specializes in clinic nurse.
On 10/21/2021 at 11:16 PM, MunoRN said:

I think a lot of the pushback to your hypothetical scenario (I'm hoping it was hypothetical) is that many may interpret it as being a claim of facts.

The risk of myocarditis in teens is clearly higher from a Covid infection than from the vaccine, that taking the reported risk at face value.  But that's just looking at myocarditis, overall the risk of Covid is inarguably greater than the vaccine for teenagers.  Overall though, it's not comparable, risk of harm from Covid infection is significantly greater than risk of harm from the vaccine.

The problem with these supposedly hypothetical scenarios is that people might misinterpret them as being true, and as a result choose not to be vaccinated because they falsely believe that is the decision that is most likely to prevent them from harm.

In addition, your previous implication that the worst thing an otherwise healthy person in their 30's will experience from a Covid infection is mild symptoms is a bit reckless.  Our Covid ICU is full of people in their 30's who correctly pointed out that they had characteristics that didn't make them high risk, yet they pretty much all end up dead or wishing they had actually died.  Again, the suggestion that in general people in their 30's, regardless of health history, are better off unvaccinated rather than vaccinated is wildly reckless.

I just looked up hospitalizations by age. On Oct 16, the 18-49 year old age range has about 800, while the 65 and over have a little fewer than 200 more than that, so your comment tracks. I'll keep trying to find good data on ICUs and ages.