barmar, on 2021-April-09, 09:51, said:
In general, even if someone is close to death, we consider whatever time they have left to be valuable, and medical professionals and care givers usually try to extend it as much as possible. Other than assisted suicide by request of the suffering patient, anything that cuts short this time is considered tragic (and assisted suicide is also controversial, illegal in many places).
So if someone dies 2 months sooner than they otherwise would have because of COVID, it makes sense to consider this an excess death.
Yes, or rather yes but.
I would not like someone saying "Oh, so Ken dies from covid, so what, he is going to die from something soon anyway". I would not like that at all. The "but" is that in emergencies with many people dying sometimes the choices are really tough. To be a bit theatrical, in a burning building if a rescue worker can rescue me or rescue a twenty-year-old but not both of us, I can imagine him choosing the twenty-year-old (especially if she is attractive
). But there could also be thinking from a different perspective. Not long ago, hospitals were overwhelmed. You would hear of ambulances carrying seriously injured people being turned away for lack of bed space. I can imagine planners thinking "Well, these older people are more likely to need hospitalization than the young are so let's give the vaccine to the older ones, it will free up some beds". And then, if you are studying the economic impact of half a million deaths, it probably matters just who is doing the dying.
But definitely, I would not want to be thought of as a "Who cares?".
A note to Cyber: I can well imagine a time when I would say "Hey, it's over. Stop with the pointless attempts to avoid reality". But it's a long way from there to thinking of covid as no big deal or as a welcome solution.
We are hopefully getting the vaccine to many. Nonetheless, there will still be some getting it and some not yet getting it. . We can argue about priorities, but we cannot eliminate priorities, Not yet.
I'm satisfied enough with the way it is being handled.