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The unspoken hard truth here is this: Long Covid is a nightmare, it's an open-ended sentence for lifetime disability. We as a society have generally "moved on" - which again, translates to a ruthless abandonment of those who happen to tangle with the actual reality of this ever-present illness and lose the to the russian-roulette-odds of the draw where the acute phase ends, but the long-term consequences bloom.

:#marseyinsane: *word salad noises*

We need to invest time and effort into changing the public perception, push for air quality standards to be enforced via OSHA and equivalent, and otherwise promote clean air standards in shared indoor spaces. People don't like wearing "masks" (fair, the surgical or cloth ones don't do much here, you need a proper N95 respirator or equivalent), but unless we have proper infrastructure in place, this is the only fallback.

If long covid is as vague permanent as is claimed, then cleaner air won't do anything. Got infected once? 15% of long covid. Got a few small droplets of the virus in you? 15% chance. Stay inside forever? My brain is foggy; therefore, I have long covid.

:marseycommitted:

The comparison to the (somewhat apocryphal) actions of Dr John Snow and the plague-spreading water pump in London's old SOHO has been made again and again -- the learnings from that time are what led the officials to build entire sewer and water purification systems, a basis which permit modern cities to exist. The same thing needs to happen today for the air which we breathe.

:marseyinsane: WE MUST PROTECT OUR PRECIOUS AIR PARTICLES AT ALL COSTS.:!marseyinsane:

Oh look, another orangetard comments below! :marseyexcited:

The CDC director and other country health ministers have started to publicly recognize long covid recently. The government is trying to get ahead of the accessibility challenges of potentially life-saving/reversing drugs too:

The big problem is 100% public perception. We have as a country failed miserably to further message the pandemic's second-order consequences. We need courageous public leaders to message this public health crisis in terms that will get through to people: i.e. economics, productivity, and the anguish of other human beings.

:marseynpc2: Why yes, I support Big Pharma and fully believe its marketers. We must have an endless roll-out of government-subsidized medication for a problem so vague that anyone can believe they have it.

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We need to invest time and effort into changing the public perception, push for air quality standards to be enforced via OSHA and equivalent, and otherwise promote clean air standards in shared indoor spaces.

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