Why get care, anti-vaxxers?
Re “Anti-vax patients get vicious. It takes a toll,” Opinion, Jan. 20
How about a simple answer to the anti-vaxxers who contract COVID-19? Just don’t come to the hospital if you are in denial that you have the disease.
If you don’t trust the people trying to save your life, stay home and tough it out. If you insist you don’t have COVID-19, quit being selfish by taking the bed of a person suffering a heart attack or, in this insane country, injuries from a gunshot wound.
Enough of your nonsense. You’re keeping us stuck in this pandemic.
And as for Dr. Venktesh Ramnath, who has been accosted by anti-vaccine COVID-19 patients and their families, I’m sorry that you and your colleagues have to put up with these belligerent people.
Mike Aguilar Costa Mesa
Long before COVID-19 appeared, I was admitted to a local hospital because I couldn’t breathe. Being told that you need open-heart surgery to replace you aortic valve is not pleasant. But it soon became evident that my survival would depend on my willingness to accept help and do what was required.
I soon learned that I needed to form a partnership with my doctors, none of whom I had met before. These skilled medical personnel scheduled tests, offered detailed explanations and described the parameters of my treatment. I asked many questions.
By the time of surgery, I was acutely aware of the partnership that forms among a patient, a family and their healthcare workers. Our trust resulted in a successful, life-changing procedure for me.
My late brother was a pulmonologist. I watched him and his fellow medical school graduates stand and take the oath to “first, do no harm.”
Patients and their families would do well to trust that promise made by all doctors, including the ones struggling to save those infected by the coronavirus.
Karen Scott Browdy Fillmore