Conor Browne Profile picture
Oct 31 9 tweets 2 min read Twitter logo Read on Twitter
1. This is an excellent article. Trust is key to pandemic response. Trust between countries, trust in government, trust in public health, and trust between individuals. In an interview I gave in 2020, I made the point that the pandemic could not have arrived at a worse time.
2. With many countries - including, but not limited to - the US and the UK, already in the grips of significant political polarisation, it was obvious to me that pandemic response would become very politicised, very quickly. And, of course, it did.
3. And this intense politicisation - primed by a complete (and often justified) mistrust of the government before the pandemic began - set the scene for individuals (again, justifiably) not trusting the government's pandemic response.
4. As I have mentioned before on this platform, I am formally trained in conflict resolution. A key element of resolving conflicts is also a key element of responding to pandemics: building trust amongst all parties involved.
5. We are a long, long way from that - in a worse place, in fact, than before the pandemic began.

Building trust requires honesty. Governments need to be honest with the public regarding:
6. The real risks of SARS-CoV-2 infection; the negative impacts the virus is having on population health, education, and the economy, and the mitigations that actually work.

Denying a problem does not build trust.
7. As the risks of SARS-CoV-2 infection becomes more and more obvious as time passes, and as it also becomes obvious that governments knew about many of these risks and mitigations but refused to communicate them, trust in government will decrease even further.
8. On an individual level, people often talk about personal non-pharmaceutical interventions - respirators, testing, clean air etc. These are all crucial interventions, but one is always missing: trust.
9. Fundamentally, I have maintained an active social life because I implicitly trust the people I choose to spend time with.

Honesty is a foundation of public health /end

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More from @brownecfm

Nov 2
1. This is the paper that's making the headlines today. I've read it in full, and its findings are, in my opinion, robust, and, frankly, align with common sense. The problem is not the paper, but its misinterpretation by the media.

thelancet.com/journals/lanhl…
2. This problem is compounded by individuals commenting on the press release, rather than the paper itself, a common problem on this platform.

To be clear: this paper is emphatically not discounting the deleterious effects on cognition that often occur as a result of Covid.
3. As an example, a direct quote from the paper:

"The worsening of cognition in people with a history of COVID-19 aligns with literature reports of the cognitive effects of the disease, in which up to 78% of people report cognitive impairment".
Read 9 tweets
Oct 31
1. A fantastic Halloween article from @BulletinAtomic , well worth a read. One line stands out:
2. 'In his novel, World War Z: An Oral History of the Zombie War, Max Brooks says “Most people don’t believe something can happen until it already has. That’s not stupidity or weakness, that’s human nature" '.
3. I would only add that, in the case of the Covid-19 pandemic, this effect is even worse, because most people now believe it's over, rather than understanding that it's still happening. To continue the analogy in the article:
Read 4 tweets
Oct 26
1. This is a very important point in a superb thread from Dr. Duncan. In my own experience, most members of the general public have an understanding of Covid-19 as follows: 'if I get Covid, I'll be sick for a few days. I might get Long Covid, but that's very rare'.
2. What I always explain is that this popular conception of Covid-19 is flawed in two crucial ways. First, that Long Covid is nowhere near as rare as most people think.
3. Second, that even if someone recovers fully from acute Covid-19 illness, as most people do, their risk of developing other health issues - cardiovascular, autoimmune etc - is significantly elevated by SARS-CoV-2 infection.
Read 4 tweets
Oct 23
1. Remember: when Covid community transmission is high, hospitals will always have an increase in patients admitted with Covid. This then leads to increased levels of nosocomial infections, which leads to increased morbidity and mortality for patients not admitted for Covid.
2. In short, hospitals are placed under intense, and cascading strain - the latter because healthcare settings are *always* hotbeds of infections during disease outbreaks, which means not only do patients enter the hospital with Covid, but visitors may well leave with it.
3. These infected visitors (and staff) then seed further clusters of infection in the community, and the cycle continues. Since no non-pharmaceutical interventions are in place in the community, and since this will keep happening until we have better vaccines, the solution is:
Read 4 tweets
Oct 17
1. So this is worth unpacking. For context, Professor Peterson is replying to a query asking her what someone should do to avoid Covid (you can obviously click back and see the original post).

I've never had Covid. I'm very sure of that.
2. I'm sure because, up until the recent death of my mother - who as many of you know, lived in a nursing home from 2019 - I tested every single day (because I obviously didn't want to bring the virus into a building with 40 CEV residents).
3. In addition, I have had no symptoms in that time period - basically, I haven't been sick since mid-2019. Now, have I been 'hiding under a rock'? Absolutely not. I meet friends regularly, I go to the cinema, I continue to engage in my hobbies - specifically photography.
Read 6 tweets
Oct 13
1. So this is a very good question from Antonio, which I will attempt to answer as fully as possible in this thread.

First, a major caveat: I'm assuming that 'how [my] life was in 2019' means 'resuming the activities that I don't do now due to Covid that I did then'.
2. I add this very important caveat, because I have changed some elements of my life for the better since 2019. Even if SARS-CoV-2 magically disappeared forever tomorrow, there are significant elements of my life now, not present in 2019, that I wouldn't alter. These include:
3. A much more profound appreciation of nature, a fierce joy in walking almost everywhere, a significantly increased understanding of the great gift of friends with shared values, and a desire to continue advocating on behalf of the disabled community.
Read 10 tweets

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