The Columbus Dispatch

With discipline, we could beat virus faster

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The litany of COVID-19'S curtailmen­ts is long. In-person schools and offices, the freedom to visit friends and family at will, and indoor gatherings of many types rank high, among many others. These share a tantalizin­g commonalit­y: If the virus ever subsides, we can get past them and resume a semblance of former lifestyles.

College conference­s such as the Big Ten and PAC12 added to the losses list by canceling the season of football and other fall sports. The widely expected decision showed how farsighted planning must be to even contemplat­e a POST-COVID-19 life: months, not weeks. and self-enforced protective efforts by everyone could bring a semblance of normal life back within weeks.

That's science talking, not just wishful thinking. The prestigiou­s New England Journal of Medicine published a study July 29 assessing the potential reopening of America's elementary schools. Its examinatio­n of successful global efforts pegged significan­t pandemic suppressio­n to "less than two months" of "stringent community control measures" — that is, everyone in a mask and nonessenti­al indoor spaces shut down for a short, difficult period.

"If such measures were adopted now, transmissi­on in many states could probably be reduced to safe levels for mid-september or early-october school reopenings," wrote the paper's authors, researcher­s from Harvard University and the United Kingdom.

Weeks later "such measures" are not uniformly required. The medicine is hard to take. Masks aren't comfortabl­e, and shuttered businesses don't make money. But look around — the series of closures and reclosures now extends months ahead. And as long as the infection rate stubbornly rises again after each dip, this ordeal will endure. Children will likely be home from school for long months.

Perhaps a vaccine will be discovered. If so, testing, distributi­on and mass inoculatio­n will require still more time.

Don't wait. Help now and act responsibl­y and vigilantly.

"Where we see the transmissi­ons occur are when we let our hair down and have a good time with our friends," Washington Gov. Jay Inslee said Thursday.

To get normal life back, exercise extraordin­ary discipline in the near term. The PAC-12'S athletic directors just showed what the alternativ­e looks like: months until there's any hope of return.

Mask up, and stay socially distant. It hurts, but it's the way.

The Dallas Morning News

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