The Oklahoman

Pathogens and politics

- Michael Gerson michaelger­son@washpost.com

Chief of Staff John Kelly is leaving the White House. It won’t take long to pack up his office because the only things in his desk are some Tylenol and a bottle of vodka.” Jimmy Fallon “The Tonight Show Starring Jimmy Fallon”

It was here in 1614 that Tommaso Caccini preached a sermon in the church of Santa Maria Novella denouncing Galileo and other scientists who held the heretical view that the Earth circles the sun. This was one of the main triggers that brought Galileo to the attention of the Inquisitio­n.

In Italian politics, the spirit of Caccini — the sacrifice of scientific reasoning to ideology — remains at work.

Italy’s right-wing coalition government, composed of conservati­ves and internet-based populists (including former communists), has provided a political home for the anti-vaccinatio­n movement.

The hard core of that movement, according to public health surveys, is quite small. But its arguments reinforce the questions and fears of a broader 15 to 20 percent of the Italian population who are seriously hesitant about vaccinatio­n.

A 2017 Italian law expanding the number of mandatory vaccinatio­ns from four to 10 produced significan­tly greater coverage, as well as a populist backlash. Italy’s new interior minister has said that the requiremen­ts are “useless and in many cases dangerous.” One senator from the government coalition has compared vaccinatio­n scars to “branding for beasts.”

The arguments of the Italian anti-vax movement are the same as elsewhere. They believe vaccinatio­ns are somehow associated with autism, tumors or allergies. Since there is no reputable science to support this view — none at all — they turn to the language of parental choice and “more freedom” for families in health care. And they often add a conspirato­rial element, accusing Big Pharma of making profits off unnecessar­y vaccinatio­ns.

The problem, of course, is that when too many parents in a community choose to believe these myths, herd immunity is lost. And when herd immunity is lost, this leaves children who truly can’t be vaccinated — children with weak immune systems, cancer and chronic illness — vulnerable to dangerous infections.

With the assumption of power, Italy’s governing coalition has become less direct in its attacks on vaccinatio­n. But it has chosen this moment — during an outbreak of measles in Italy that has led to thousands of infections and at least 10 deaths — to reassess if vaccinatio­ns should be mandatory.

Some of the resistance to vaccinatio­n is natural. The idea of giving healthy people a medical treatment that involves risks has always raised questions. And the dramatic success of vaccinatio­ns has (paradoxica­lly) made the risk of infectious disease seem more distant and less urgent.

But some elements in Italy and the U.S. have fed these sentiments for ideologica­l reasons. The populist revolt against the “establishm­ent” has been extended from the governing establishm­ent to the medical and scientific establishm­ent. It involves the questionin­g not only of various authoritie­s but also of the idea of authority itself.

Giovanni Rezza, the head of Italy’s version of the National Institutes of Health, described to me “a loss of the sense of authority — a mistrust of all sectors of society.” He remains confident that most people can be reached by medical profession­als carrying sound informatio­n about vaccinatio­n. But this is complicate­d, he admits, when “authoritie­s seem corrupted.”

There is more at work here than institutio­nal distrust. The problem reaches the realm of epistemolo­gy. Radical populists create their own elaborate universe of ideologica­l loyalty and debunked science. They inhabit a clean, comfortabl­e world of their own creation, denying any unfavorabl­e news as “fake news” and any unfavorabl­e science as biased and corrupt. A revolt against the establishm­ent becomes a revolt against the scientific method, which becomes a revolt against reason itself.

But pathogens really don’t care about political constructs. They lurk in small pockets of humanity, and return with a vengeance when humans are not vigilant. When politics lessens that vigilance, it can leave not only confusion, but victims.

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