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Opinion: Treating kids as invulnerable is treating them as disposable

Discussion in 'Epidemics (including Covid-19, not Long Covid)' started by ladycatlover, Feb 16, 2023.

  1. ladycatlover

    ladycatlover Senior Member (Voting Rights)

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    Location:
    Liverpool, UK
    Someone posted this article on Twitter - it concerns the treatment of Children in Canada. Sounds much the same as in UK to me.

     
    boolybooly, MeSci, Sean and 7 others like this.
  2. DokaGirl

    DokaGirl Senior Member (Voting Rights)

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    3,664
    Thanks for this @ladycatlover

    Yes, public health care experts in Canada adivsed kids would be fine. They broadcast the idea COVID would only adversely affect older people. This gave teens and young adults license to carry on as usual.
     
  3. CRG

    CRG Senior Member (Voting Rights)

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    1,857
    Location:
    UK
    Given the author is a colleague of Timothy Caulfield this is a pretty disappointing article, it's a mess of history, culture and stats that doesn't gel into anything comprehensible.

    Saying COVID was the leading cause of death amongst <19s sounds terrible but most of those deaths were of kids with health vulnerabilities about who no one thought they were invulnerable. Most 'all cause' child deaths globally from are from avoidable disease but the article doesn't seem concerned with that even though that would be a more significant comparator than Roman Egypt or ancient Nasca. The greatest health threats to children and young people in the developed world are obesity and inactivity, which I suppose could be a result of parental notions of invulnerability but has been clearly linked to parental fears about the dangers of the outside world, hardly supporting an invulnerability hypothesis.

    The author seems to have some message (in line with Caulfield) about challenging the anti vax movement, but that movement isn't driven by notions of invulnerability, but a perverse sense of the natural world being safer than science, i.e it's about misplaced fearfulness not a lack of fear. Anti vax people might believe in measles parties, but they aren't insisting their children swim in sewage or have regular periods of growth stunting famine every year.

    The author seems to be a lawyer, on the basis of this article he would be better to stick to strictly legal questions and leave historical epidemiology and social psychology to his colleagues.
     

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