Dayton Daily News

Mass panic worse than the actual coronaviru­s

Temper fear with reason, panic with patience and uncertaint­y with education. We have an opportunit­y to learn a great deal.

- By Dr. Abdu Sharkawy Dr. Abdu Sharkawy is a doctor and an infectious disease specialist at the University of Toronto in Canada. This is adapted from an article he wrote and permitted InsideSour­ces to distribute.

The coronaviru­s is here. But fear not.

Mass panic is also here. Fear.

I’m a doctor and an infectious diseases specialist. I’ve been at this for more than 20 years seeing sick patients on a daily basis.

I have worked in inner-city hospitals andin the poorest slums of Africa.

HIV-AIDS, Hepatitis, TB, SARS, measles, shingles, whooping cough, diphtheria ... there is little I haven’t been exposed to in my profession. And with notable exception of SARS, very little has left me feeling vulnerable, overwhelme­d or downright scared.

I am not scared of Covid-19. I am concerned about the implicatio­ns of a novel infectious agent that has spread the world over and continues to find new footholds in different soil. I am rightly concerned for the welfare of those who are elderly, in frail health or disenfranc­hised who stand to suffer mostly, and disproport­ionately, at the hands of this new scourge. But I am not scared of Covid-19.

What I am scared about is the loss of reason and wave of fear that has induced the masses of society into a spellbindi­ng spiral of panic, stockpilin­g obscene quantities of anything that could fill a bomb shelter adequately in a post-apocalypti­c world.

I am scared of the N95 masks that are stolen from hospitals and clinics where they are actually needed for frontline health-care providers and instead are being donned in airports, malls and coffee lounges, perpetuati­ng even more fear and suspicion. I am scared that our hospitals will be overwhelme­d with anyone who thinks they “probably don’t have it but may as well get checked out no matter what because you just never know ...” and those with heart failure, emphysema, pneumonia and strokes will pay the price for overfilled ER waiting rooms.

I am scared that travel restrictio­ns will become so far reaching that weddings will be canceled, graduation­s missed and family reunions will not materializ­e. And well, even that big party called the Olympic Games ... that could be kyboshed, too.

Can you even imagine? I’m scared those same epidemic fears will limit trade, harm partnershi­ps in multiple sectors, business and otherwise, and ultimately culminate in a global recession.

But mostly, I’m scared about what message we are telling our kids when faced with a threat. Instead of reason, rationalit­y, openminded­ness and altruism, we are telling them to panic, be fearful, suspicious, reactionar­y and self-interested.

Covid-19 is nowhere near over. It will be coming to a city, a hospital, a friend, even a family member near you at some point. Expect it. Stop waiting to be surprised further. The fact is the virus itself will not likely do much harm when it arrives. But our own behaviors and “fight for yourself above all else” attitude could prove disastrous.

I implore you all. Temper fear with reason, panic with patience and uncertaint­y with education. We have an opportunit­y to learn a great deal about health hygiene and limiting the spread of innumerabl­e transmissi­ble diseases in our society. Let’s meet this challenge together in the best spirit of compassion for others, patience, and above all, an unfailing effort to seek truth, facts and knowledge as opposed to conjecture, speculatio­n and catastroph­izing.

Facts, not fear. Clean hands. Open hearts.

Our children will thank us for it.

 ??  ?? Sharkawy
Sharkawy

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