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Richard Feldman
It’s been a long two and a half years. COVID-19 disrupted everyday life, education, personal finances, businesses, health care, and the economy. Serious illness and death became an all-too-common fact of everyday life. Anxiety, depression, isolation, and health care professional burnout were hallmarks of the challenges faced. It has been a rough, bumpy road for the public health and the scientific communities on a steep learning curve. The science naturally changed as the pandemic caused by this never-before- experienced virus progressed. What was thought to be true one week was not necessarily true the next.
The virus mutated into new variants requiring continually changing messages issued by public health and governmental authorities, adjusted to best protect people’s lives and the very foundations of our society. The public became confused; a significant segment became distrustful even of the miraculous developments of highly effective COVID vaccines and other new treatments. Compounding the situation were really poor communications from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention that were unclear, conflicted, confusing, and too complicated.
On top of everything, COVID became politicized, further polarizing an already divisive nation. Even the CDC faced broad political pressures affecting its recommendations beyond the direct unprecedented interference by the Trump administration. Misinformation, and worse, disinformation flourished. Opposition to vaccination and masking became a political banner for the conservative right; in some states, public mitigation restrictions were unjustifiably discouraged and prematurely ended.
Over a million Americans have perished from COVID-19; many died needlessly due the disinformation and the political rhetoric responsible for much of the resistance to vaccination and other basic mitigation efforts. Mixing politics and public health is a bad combination and rarely ends well.
Unfortunately, amid the confusion, distrust, and frustration present during an unstable and uncertain time, the stage was set for an escalating “anti-science” perspective with the public. Interesting articles have been published recently on anti-science.
Anti-science is the denunciation or discrediting of mainstream scientific views and prominent scientists, commonly replaced with pseudoscience or unproven or misleading assessments. We are living in what is termed a “post-truth era” with baseless beliefs and subjective opinions taking precedent over proven facts — emotion over reason.
Trump didn’t originate anti-science but he did legitimize it. The Trump administration utilized it effectively during the COVID crisis with a deliberate disinformation crusade. It minimized the pandemic’s severity, predicting the virus would magically disappear, claiming hospitalizations and deaths were overreported or falsely attributed to COVID, discouraging the use of masking, promoting bogus treatments rather than actively promoting vaccination, and sidelining public health experts. Anti-vaccination activists had a heyday. Various members of Congress and red-state governors joined the bandwagon, and conspiracy theorists found fertile ground.
Today, a third of Americans remain unvaccinated, disproportionately represented by conservative Republicans. Anti-science is not historically part of the Republican agenda. But partly due to Trump’s continuing hold on the Republican Party, anti-science is alive and well.
I don’t have the solution for reversing the proliferation of anti-science especially among the conservative right. But the pendulum commonly swings, and hopefully this too shall pass.
Richard Feldman, M.D., is an Indianapolis family physician and former Indiana State Health Commissioner. The opinions are the writer’s.
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Richard Feldman
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