![]() ![]() If millions of people end up developing persistent health issues after the acute disease stage, they will likely encounter a medical system unable to do much more than shrug. We should be far more concerned about the shadow of long COVID. ![]() It also worsened inequality, increased the prevalence of depressive disorders, added “moral injury” to the common lexicon and set back students’ learning trajectories for years to come.Īmid the noise of an ongoing emergency, it can be hard to notice troubling new trends. The pandemic revealed strange hidden interdependencies hospital demand for liquid oxygen, for example, delayed rocket launches. Many of us who could do our jobs remotely discovered the power of owning our time. COVID concerns made it easier for European cities to install miles and miles of bike lanes, giving us a glimpse of a car-free urban future. The virus provoked other reckonings and pivots-not all of them bad. His xenophobic rhetoric has spread, feeding dangerous conspiracy theories, threatening scientific research and leading to a rise in hate crimes. As Alondra Nelson, who is now deputy director for science and society at the White House Office of Science and Technology Policy, explained it to me in December 2020: “This idyllic idea of solidarity, especially in a wartime modality, is created by making an enemy of someone else.” Indeed, former president Donald Trump tried to make an enemy by blaming the virus on China. COVID was never going to be the “common enemy” that finally united Americans. Except for the behavioral scientists, misinformation researchers, sociologists, historians and speculative fiction writers who spent 2020 waving their arms ( sometimes in the pages of this magazine), calling attention to cognitive bias, influence operations, accessibility issues and barriers to trust. The politicization of our best tool for ending the pandemic surprised everyone. Some Americans think the vaccine represents a weapon of oppression, if not a literal weapon. ![]() has one of the lowest vaccination rates among wealthy countries. But more than a year after the shots became available, the U.S. Scientists formed a global hive mind and delivered a supereffective vaccine faster than anyone thought possible. The past two years have been full of incongruities, paradoxes and absurdities. claims the highest reported number of COVID cases- as well as COVID deaths-in the world. ![]() Does that mean the damage wasn’t as bad as many predicted? That question can only be answered in the context of another superlative: the U.S. In America, though, the cartoon didn’t play out exactly as drawn. I’ve often thought of that statement, by Canadian cartoonist Graeme MacKay, in moments that seem to define our pandemic disorientation: the botched messaging, willful unpreparedness and exhausted confusion. Behind it was an even bigger wave marked “recession.” And beyond that one was a tower of water that threatened to swallow it all: “climate change.” A speech bubble emerged from the skyline: “Be sure to wash your hands and all will be well.” Not far out at sea, a giant wave labeled “COVID-19” was about to crash over the city. It showed a city perched on a tiny island, surrounded by ocean. In the spring of 2020 a cartoon was making the rounds on social media. ![]()
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