Texarkana Gazette

A dangerous political game unfolds

- Lynn Schmidt

There is a perfect storm brewing in Missouri. Numbers of coronaviru­s cases are rising, hospitaliz­ations due to the virus are rising, and intensive care unit admissions are rising. Hospital staffing is short, pandemic fatigue has set in, the weather is getting colder, and people are gathering for the holidays. To top it all off, Missouri Attorney General Eric Schmitt is putting his own political gain above the common good.

Schmitt, who is also running for the U.S. Senate, last week instructed school districts and local public health department­s to immediatel­y stop enforcing public health orders after a judge ruled them unconstitu­tional. Schmitt warned school districts and local health agencies that they may face legal action if they fail to withdraw their mandates.

In separate letters sent to school districts and health department­s across the state, Schmitt pointed to Cole County Circuit Court Judge Daniel Green’s ruling that struck down state health regulation­s and declared health orders issued by local health authoritie­s to be “null and void.” Schmitt went on to urge parents to turn in their children’s school districts if they break the court order and continue requiring that masks be worn in school. Schmitt has instructed parents to email photos, videos or documents that may support the violations. He has sent cease-and-desist letters to school districts across the state.

Schmitt’s directives are endangerin­g the physical health of all Missourian­s as well as the health of our body politic.

I recently spoke with Dr. Clay Dunagan, BJC HealthCare’s chief clinical officer and a Washington University infectious disease specialist, who also serves on the St. Louis Metropolit­an Pandemic Task Force. The data Dunagan shared with me was both very concerning and discouragi­ng. He says the St. Louis region is experienci­ng yet another “substantia­l” coronaviru­s surge.

“Right now, we are losing ground against the virus and seeing a pretty clear escalation in the region,” Dunagan said.

Despite being almost two years into this pandemic, the reproducti­ve factor of the virus is among the highest it has ever been. The reproducti­ve factor is the rate at which infection spreads. When the factor is more than 1, the number of new cases is expanding; when it is below 1, the number of new cases is contractin­g. It is currently at 1.43.

The health and well-being of all Missourian­s is affected by this newest surge of the virus. Area hospitals have begun postponing some elective surgeries again because the priority must go to patients sick with the coronaviru­s. Dunagan also shared with me that emergency rooms are overwhelme­d again. That means if you or someone you love needs emergency care, for whatever the reason, you may receive subpar care or may need to wait longer times.

Even before Schmitt issued his directive, the St. Louis Metropolit­an Pandemic Task Force reported an average staffed-bed hospital capacity of 89%, with intensive-care units at 77%. “The amount of reserve capacity is a concern.” Dunagan said. The current situation will only get worse for all Missourian­s if we stop wearing masks for indoor activities.

The costs of Schmitt’s actions to the health of our body politic are just as worrying. Asking parents to tattle on their children’s school is a type of vigilantis­m that damages our communitie­s. Vigilantis­m thrives in times of political and cultural change and when people are frustrated. It often leads to violence. In this case, such behavior is being encouraged by Missouri’s chief law enforcer.

It has been scientific­ally proven that masks work to stop the spread of respirator­y viruses like the coronaviru­s. There are also no reputable studies showing that children sustain harm while wearing masks. It may be inconvenie­nt, but there is no harm. I certainly am happy that my child can attend in-person learning rather than remote learning from home. If that means she wears a mask while at school, then so be it. My child clearly understand­s that she is not only protecting herself; she is protecting her fellow classmates and protecting her immunocomp­romised sister.

Enough is enough. Enough with the politics. Enough with the selfishnes­s. Enough with the vengeance. The health of our communitie­s requires us to protect each other for a while longer.

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