tern Profile picture
Sep 27, 2024 26 tweets 3 min read Read on X
I chatted about this with a colleague yesterday.

They raised this report and a couple of local incidents, and said that it is really sad this stuff is happening.

I offered the suggestion that both the local people they mentioned had been ill with heart problems in the immediate aftermath of Covid infections.

Their response really opened my eyes.Image
They said "you're as bad as the people who blame it on the vaccine"
My eyes popped out.
I spluttered "what do you mean by that?"
Them: "You're just trying to find something to blame for everyday things. They're blaming the vaccine and you're blaming covid."
Me: "but that's the point of the article. It's not everyday things. This is a sudden overload of these incidents that weren't happening before Covid and are happening now."
Them: "ok, well, if there's an increase in this type of thing, it's more likely because of the forced inactivity during lockdown"
Me: (failing to keep my cool) "we were allowed out to exercise. And Joe Wicks was the most watched YouTuber in the country. And the stories about these people actually include details about how fit they were"
Them: "well I don't know then"
Me: "Well the British Heart Foundation do. They have stated clearly and plainly that covid infections cause heart conditions, and that covid infections are responsible for a hundred thousand heart deaths."
And I knew what was coming next.
Them: "well why isn't that in the news?"
Me: "because people don't want to hear that the virus they thought they had to catch causes heart conditions, so they avoid trying to hear it or understand it, like you just did"
Them: (pause) "well, I just find that all too depressing to think about"

Me: "exactly. but you did ask"
I walked home replaying it in my mind.

The key part that bugged me was the false equivalence and redirect:
"blaming covid is as bad as blaming vaccines, besides it's lockdowns"
The "blaming covid infections is as bad as blaming vaccines" is just so weird, but I think it's all part of the avoidance and denial.
There's some kind of drive to deny anything bad is happening.

So anyone who points out something bad is happening must be wrong.
And they must all be at the same degree of craziness.
And then came the redirect: "but we actually know it was lockdowns"

Which really made me angry, because they'd just accused me of being whack. 😂
The funny thing was that they had raised the subject wanting to talk about the sad mystery of it all, and how "oh this is so mysterious, but it was probably lockdowns" but I had scuppered their morbid small talk with the British Heart Foundation's warning.
I suspect they will have driven home thinking about the conversation and then poured themselves a big glass of red wine and told themselves that the scary man is just as bad as the antivaxers.
They didn't want answers.

They wanted someone to moan with, but I wasn't going to oblige.
Here's the British Heart Foundation on heart stuff:
And here's the correlation between covid waves and heart attack waves here:

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More from @1goodtern

Feb 7
People don't understand that there are several real models of cumulative harm that apply to covid infections.

People don't like complex ideas, so they avoid them.

This is going to be a long thread, with several simple ideas that combine to make a big complex one.
First off, we *know* beyond all doubt that covid infections cause short term harm.
The amount of short term harm varies from person to person and infection to infection, but it's there.
Read 46 tweets
Feb 5
Do midwives know that they're now twice as likely to be off sick with a pregnancy related disorder than before the Covid pandemic started? Image
Do nurses?
And health visitors? Image
Similar trend across all staff groups, with an apparent accelerating increase more recently. Image
Read 32 tweets
Jan 22
I think one of the most important conclusions people are missing from the data in the recent big studies is that covid infections cause radically diverse long term effects in different age groups.
So much so that it could appear as if they've been infected with different viruses.
But it's not the virus that's different, it's the immune system, the metabolism, and the way the body repairs the damage done by the infection.
Read 9 tweets
Jan 20
Okay folks, I'm calling it, and it's bad news:

The word mucinous is going to become much more common.

Yes, bookmark this tweet, it looks bland, but it's important.
oh, okay. I won't leave you hanging.

I've written a lot recently about how we're missing the big picture of how covid infection is doing cumulative damage to interfaces in the body - linings, membranes, barriers, walls, filters.
I don't want to rewrite that all here, but I don't want to bust the flow of this thread, so at the end of it, I'll post the thread I wrote on linings.
Read 51 tweets
Jan 19
I know, I know, you're going to laugh at me for saying that you're more likely to have problems with cramp after you've had a covid infection, but it's all very simple science.
Loads of people have been mentioning cramp recently, and like so many other conditions, yes, covid infection makes it more likely, and makes it worse.
It's just an extra factor on top of all the normal factors for cramp.
Muscles are fussy about blood flow.
They need a steady supply of oxygen to contract and, crucially, to relax.
Covid messes with the small blood vessels that supply it, so muscles end up slightly under-fuelled, and under-fuelled muscles cramp.
Read 13 tweets
Jan 18
Do you know which whacky loons say that covid infections increase the risk of heart disease?
The British Heart Foundation.
Do you know which antivaxers say that covid vaccines do not fully protect against infection, illness, or long term effects?
Pfizer.
Do you know which hysterical doom merchants say covid can cause long term lung damage even after a mild case?
British Lung Foundation.
Read 32 tweets

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