Colin Furness MISt PhD MPH Profile picture
Sep 5, 2022 14 tweets 3 min read Read on X
I've been quiet this summer, in ECM (existential contemplation mode) since the Ontario provincial election when we collectively decided that ignoring COVID was good policy.

It was pretty much the only thing all major parties seemed to agree on.

Where to go from here?

1/14
Public Health leadership has switched from protecting health to pacifying the public by minimizing knowledge. It's appalling, IMO.

To a large degree, mainstream media has gone right along with it. Also appalling, IMO.

2/14
At the beginning of the pandemic, I asked myself what I could do about this catastrophe. I devoted a lot of time to reading, writing, and speaking about what we need to do to protect ourselves.

This advocacy was meant to influence public policy. It sure didn't work.

3/14
So it has been a dispiriting 2.5 years. But as someone said to me recently, I may have helped a lot of individuals who have been listening and wanting to stay safe. I certainly have a long list of public health heroes who I have been watching do exactly that.

4/14
That is something I intend to continue working at - here on Twitter helping with knowledge translation for people who want to be safe, but are getting lousy (or even overtly harmful) advice from government and media.

I may move to protected Tweets, not sure yet.

5/14
Challenging misinformation matters a lot. Churchill once opined that lies travel half-way around the world before truth gets its trousers on.

(He may well be guilty of understatement, IMO.)

6/14
I expect to continue pushing back against misinformation and misunderstanding. But I likely won't spend much time calling out politicians for harmful decisions because that now seems futile.

Better to leave room for a far more important voice ...

7/14
Clinicians. We need to hear more from clinicians, about their front-line experiences.

Why clinicians?

If government and media won't talk about the plight of our ailing healthcare system and tragic COVID outcomes, they can. They are direct witnesses to it all.

8/14
It's asking a lot from this group that has suffered so much and continues to suffer.

But while the public has become inured to death statistics, I believe we remain able to respond with empathy to individual stories of deteriorating health and healthcare.

9/14
It's clear politicians from all parties won't act until there is public outrage. And there can't be public outrage if the public is in the dark.

Every clinician who speaks up is on my Heroes list. And they get badly attacked for it. (Because that's what fascists do).

10/14
Beyond wanting to make room for clinician voices, I will also be quietly continuing work writing expert witness reports for grievances and lawsuits over COVID safety.

Where our politicians have dropped the ball, the courts may be our only tool to make safe workplaces.

11/14
For example, I have seen some success persuading employers to provide free respirator masks to those who are informed enough to know they need them.

These are cheap when purchased in bulk, but unaffordable to many for whom this is essential safety equipment.

12/14
In this way we may slowly replace dangerous workplace policies with safe ones, despite our CmOh and its unscientific and reckless approach to public safety.

The first frontier was a right to respirator masks at work.

Maybe indoor air quality standards could be next.

13/14
So if I seem quieter, it's because I'll be trying to support clinician voices, paying less attention to politicians, and orienting to court-ordered safety in lieu of competent public health policy.

But I'll still provide my own take here, for people who happen to want it.

14/14

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More from @FurnessColin

Jul 21, 2024
I have been inadvertently quiet here for months. A few reasons for that, some fun, some not.

But I'm now 3 weeks into my sabbatical, clearing room for more thinking time.

This includes reflecting on what I'm actually trying to accomplish in the late pandemic era.

1/5
Having been a public epidemiologist since 2020, I think I can boil it down to a need to analyze and talk about things that need to be said, but that aren't being said.

In the first three years, that totaled nearly than 3,000 interviews with journalists.

Yes, I counted.

2/5
But over the last 1-2 years, there has seemed less that needed saying that isn't already being said on this platform and elsewhere by very capable people. That is awesome.

(Although I do wish the media were more engaged in issues like air quality and safe public spaces.)

3/5
Read 5 tweets
Apr 1, 2024
This brief thread has a VERY targeted audience: faculty and librarians at the University of Toronto.

If you are one of the thousands in the U of T Faculty Association, and if you generally support what I stand for, please read on.

It's about the current UTFA election.

1/5
I have been beyond disturbed at the rhetoric in this election.

Full disclosure: the incumbent, Terezia Zoric, is a mentor of mine. I'm biased, yes, but I also know her WELL.

She has done a Really. Great. Job.

2/5
She is being challenged by someone who has mounted what I see as a vitriolic, rage and hate campaign. It's vile.

Rage farming & hate mongering have proven very effective in recent years for dangerous people to win elections.

I don't want that for UTFA. Neither should you.

3/5
Read 5 tweets
Dec 17, 2023
This brief thread is very specifically for journalists: some follow me & maybe still drop in?

We need to talk about how COVID burden/outcome measures are reported.

Counting hospital admissions & deaths WAS appropriate in 2020-21.

Now those stats badly misinform. Why?

1/6
Until Omicron, our frame was a respiratory virus that infected & killed rapidly.

Low population immunity and limited understanding of what the virus does to the body, meant that incidence rate, ICU capacity, and deaths told us when things were better or worse.

Not now.

2/6
B/c COVID is a whole-body disease w/ vascular, neurological, immune, & endocrine harms.

Less *acute respiratory* harm now, b/c:

a. the most vulnerable already died
b. we have some population immunity
c. Omicron is less severe than Delta

Much more diffuse harms instead ...

3/6
Read 6 tweets
Dec 14, 2023
A cathartic thread about the perils of doing public science communication during a pandemic.

Yesterday, I was notified that I have been granted the teaching stream equivalent of tenure at the University of Toronto where I teach.

This is on my list of major life events.

1/10
I'm thrilled, of course. But this thread isn't about that, it's about the danger of being blunt while precarious, and being unable to properly defend myself.

COVID did *not* make promotion easier. (It did influence my pedagogy narrative, and delayed my review by a year.)

2/10
I accrued a lot of hateful complaints to both my Deans. Sometimes because I was impolite, or because I was right, or because of a fight.

It also needs to be said that my colleagues who are women or/and people of colour get hate much MUCH worse. But still.

3/10
Read 10 tweets
Dec 11, 2023
We have TWO big problems here.

The FIRST problem is that in missing what the REAL Long COVID problem is, this Star article misinforms.

The SECOND (real) problem is that we actually don't understand Long COVID prevalence at all.

1/19

thestar.com/news/over-3-mi…
The first part of this thread is about Why.

Why there is no uniform case definition for Long COVID.

Why we use a variable symptom laundry list, many of which are non-specific.

The second part of this thread considers the negative consequences of this knowledge deficit.

2/19
With a defined disease, we know four things: cause, mechanism, progression, and symptoms. We use these to craft a case definition, which is the yardstick used to diagnose new cases.

With Long COVID, we actually don't know any of these. Let's start with cause ...

3/19
Read 21 tweets
Dec 7, 2023
An expansive musing thread on mask non-use, which I am now calling "mask akinesia".

Every class I teach, I walk in with my mask and my Aranet4 CO2 detector, to measure air quality. I'm lucky: the rooms I teach in are always below 800ppm and often below 700ppm.

1/20
I make a show of measuring air quality with my mask on.

I often remind them that the air is excellent but that doesn't lower the risk from people sitting immediately around them.

~4% of my students wear masks. ~30% have missed class because of COVID, some cough in class.

2/20
One day, CO2 was 1800ppm, too high! Two of 3 air exchangers weren't operating. I told the class that the air wasn't safe, and to put on a mask if they had one.

They heard me and looked concerned. And nobody moved.

Alright, I thought, none of them have a mask.

No masks.

3/20
Read 20 tweets

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