The Bakersfield Californian

COVID today, tomorrow

It’s mankind’s ardent hope that COVID-19 kills rarely and sparingly. Hope is not a strategy this pathogen will sign on, however. Let’s move forward nonetheles­s with confidence underpinne­d by best practices.

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We have to get out and breathe. Staying at home is too smothering. There is restless desire to go back to work. Going forward, weekends should be long enough stay-at-home requiremen­ts.

The shelter-in-place requiremen­t flattened the COVID curve, flattened the economy and has nearly flattened our senses. Let’s find a sensible way out.

Let’s build the future based on demonstrab­le trust and verifiable facts.

COVID-19, being a novel virus, is shrouded in layers of mysteries. Mysteries will peel one layer at a time. After all, we are early in this pandemic.

It’s mankind’s ardent hope that COVID-19 kills rarely and sparingly. Hope is not a strategy this pathogen will sign on, however. Let’s move forward nonetheles­s with confidence underpinne­d by best practices.

A safe work place will require demonstrab­le safety in mind of many workers and mere opportunit­y to work in others. This may expose businesses to additional COVID related liabilitie­s. Liabilitie­s over and above the usual California requiremen­ts.

Health and safety issues supersede legal implicatio­ns, but not entirely. If frivolous lawsuits are allowed to take root, economy won’t.

Entreprene­urship, not exploitati­on, makes society viable and America exceptiona­l.

Let going back to work be not an open season on the blood and sweat of the ones striving. Let’s protect businesses from lawsuits that COVID has already inflicted near existentia­l damage upon.

Employers should put in practice the standard mitigation measures to protect employees, customers and business. These measures will include distancing, masks and enhanced hygienic practices. Expanded testing is in process of being developed and will be a big help. These measures will be our best preventati­ve defenses against a second wave. We keep adding to our repertoire additional tools that include life-saving medicines and, hopefully, soon virus deterring vaccines.

In the interim, we need to keep the most vulnerable among us best protected. People over the age of 65 and those with comorbidit­ies should be encouraged to minimize contact.

The younger population without comorbidit­ies should return to work with explicit recognitio­n that infection is likely and precaution­s are necessary. Precaution­s help minimize viral load in case of contact with an infected person. The amount of viral load received may determine the eventual outcome. A smaller viral load may allow a body’s immunity to stay ahead of virus and make it nonthreate­ning.

As we take this tentative step forward to open the economy, let’s make sure it’s a firm step forward. Compliance not defiance is a necessary virtue; the rest of the economy counts on it.

Good luck, my fellow citizens, and God bless America!

Dr. Brij Bhambi specialize­s in cardiac and vascular interventi­on, nuclear cardiology, consultati­ve and general cardiology and holds board certificat­ion in interventi­onal cardiology, cardiovasc­ular disease and internal medicine. He is a chief medical officer at Bakersfiel­d Heart Hospital.

 ??  ?? DR. BRIJ BHAMBI
DR. BRIJ BHAMBI

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