COVID SENSE FROM DR FAUCI

On a weekly basis, I receive an Education update newsletter from Gordon Collins, of Careers & Education Services.

Gordon highlights the work of Anthony Stephen Fauci, the american physician and immunologist who has served as the director of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases since 1984, currently responsible for advising President Trump. Dr Fauci has this to say about Viruses, which in my view is really worth a read. My own University studies were at the University of Leicester, where one of my 2 majors was Biological Sciences, in which I specialised in Ecology and Microbiology. For all of my life I have held a deep respect for viruses, having seen Poliovirus victims during my childhood years. My deputy at Senior Boys, Ronell Selzer also shares my biological interests, she and I are as equally concerned now that Covid-19 virus continues to deserve our full respect. As a whole school, executive headteacher, Justin Spanswick causes us all to take stock every day to ensure we are ‘on this’! I’ll leave the rest to Dr Fauci:

Chickenpox is a virus. Lots of people have had it, and probably don’t think about it much once the initial illness has passed. But it stays in your body and lives there forever, and maybe when you’re older, you have debilitatingly painful outbreaks of shingles. You don’t just get over this virus in a few weeks, never to have another health effect. We know this because it’s been around for years, and has been studied medically for years.

Herpes is also a virus. And once someone has it, it stays in your body and lives there forever, and anytime they get a little run down or stressed-out they’re going to have an outbreak. Maybe every time you have a big event coming up (school pictures, job interview, big date) you’re going to get a cold sore. For the rest of your life. You don’t just get over it in a few weeks. We know this because it’s been around for years, and been studied medically for years.

HIV is a virus. It attacks the immune system and makes the carrier far more vulnerable to other illnesses. It has a list of symptoms and negative health impacts that goes on and on. It was decades before viable treatments were developed that allowed people to live with a reasonable quality of life. Once you have it, it lives in your body forever and there is no cure. Over time, that takes a toll on the body, putting people living with HIV at greater risk for health conditions such as cardiovascular disease, kidney disease, diabetes, bone disease, liver disease, cognitive disorders, and some types of cancer. We know this because it has been around for years, and had been studied medically for years.

With COVID-19, we have a novel virus that spreads rapidly and easily. The full spectrum of symptoms and health effects is only just beginning to be catalogued, much less understood.

So far the symptoms may include:
· Fever
· Fatigue
· Coughing
· Pneumonia
· Chills/Trembling
· Acute respiratory distress
· Lung damage (potentially permanent)
· Loss of taste (a neurological symptom)
· Sore throat
· Headaches
· Difficulty breathing
· Mental confusion
· Diarrhea
· Nausea or vomiting
· Loss of appetite
· Strokes have also been reported in some people who have COVID-19 (even in the relatively young)
· Swollen eyes
· Blood clots
· Seizures
· Liver damage
· Kidney damage
· Rash
· COVID toes (weird, right?)

People testing positive for COVID-19 have been documented to be sick even after 60 days. Many people are sick for weeks, get better, and then experience a rapid and sudden flare up and get sick all over again. Children with MIS-C may have a fever and various symptoms, including abdominal pain, vomiting, diarrhea, neck pain, rash, bloodshot eyes, or feeling extra tired. While rare, it has caused deaths. This disease has not been around for years. It has basically been 6 months. No one knows yet the long-term health effects, or how it may present itself years down the road for people who have been exposed. We literally *do not know* what we do not know.

For those in our society who suggest that people being cautious are cowards, for people who refuse to take even the simplest of precautions to protect themselves and those around them, I want to ask, without hyperbole and in all sincerity:

How dare you?

How dare you risk the lives of others so cavalierly. How dare you decide for others that they should welcome exposure as “getting it over with”, when literally no one knows who will be the lucky “mild symptoms” case, and who may fall ill and die. Because while we know that some people are more susceptible to suffering a more serious case, we also know that 20 and 30-year-olds have died, marathon runners and fitness nuts have died, children and infants have died.

How dare you behave as though you know more than medical experts, when those same experts acknowledge that there is so much we don’t yet know, but with what we DO know, are smart enough to be scared of how easily this is spread, and recommend baseline precautions such as:
· Frequent hand-washing
· Physical distancing
· Reduced social/public contact or interaction
· Mask wearing
· Covering your cough or sneeze
· Avoiding touching your face
· Sanitizing frequently touched surfaces

The more things we can all do to mitigate our risk of exposure, the better off we all are. Not only does it flatten the curve and allow health care providers to maintain levels of service that aren’t immediately and catastrophically overwhelmed; it also reduces unnecessary suffering and deaths, and buys time for the scientific community to study the virus in order to come to a more full understanding of the breadth of its impacts in both the short and long term. I reject the notion that it’s “just a virus” and we’ll all get it eventually. What a careless, lazy, heartless stance.”



About jameswilding

Academic Principal Claires Court Schools Long term member & advocate of the Independent Schools Association
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