{"id":51716,"date":"2021-09-16T09:00:00","date_gmt":"2021-09-16T16:00:00","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/www.kentreporter.com\/opinion\/editorial-a-message-to-the-unvaccinated-and-unmasked\/"},"modified":"2021-09-16T09:00:00","modified_gmt":"2021-09-16T16:00:00","slug":"editorial-a-message-to-the-unvaccinated-and-unmasked","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.kentreporter.com\/opinion\/editorial-a-message-to-the-unvaccinated-and-unmasked\/","title":{"rendered":"Editorial: A message to the unvaccinated and unmasked"},"content":{"rendered":"
By The Herald Editorial Board<\/strong><\/p>\n If there’s one pandemic symptom that seems universal and now rampant — regardless of vaccination status and mask use — it’s frustration; seething, consuming and infectious frustration.<\/p>\n Those who have refused jabs for one of three vaccines for covid-19 and chafe at advice and mandates for masks have had it with the rest of us — including their own family members — over the coaxing and cajoling, the shaming and the guilt, the warnings and the threats.<\/p>\n They are not impressed. They are not swayed. They are certain they are right; they — after all — have done their own research. And they are not going to listen; not to statistics; not to medical experts; certainly not to public officials and editorial writers; not even to those who once agreed with their antivax stance but now have made deathbed appeals — gasping for each breath — that they, please, get vaccinated.<\/p>\n But the rest of us are fed up, too. And this isn’t a guilt trip; it’s anger. Anger borne out of months of personal sacrifice; separation from friends, family and church; loss of businesses, of income, of savings; restrictions on our travel and our pastimes; and fatigue from workarounds like remote learning, working from home and Zoom meetings. (Yes, I know I’m on mute! I don’t want you to hear me swearing.)<\/p>\n We’re angry mostly because we were all given ways to get past all of that, and we were enjoying a slow return to something close to what we remember as normal: first with social distancing, hygienic habits and masks; then, blessedly, with not one but three safe and effective vaccines, one of which now has full approval from the Food and Drug Administration for all, 12 years of age and older.<\/p>\n At last, we thought earlier this summer, we are going to beat this.<\/p>\n But covid-19 — and the delta variant that took advantage of vaccine hesitancy — had other plans for us.<\/p>\n Now we’re angry because we’re afraid that we may be quickly losing what we’ve gained. That fear — although the antivaxxers will deny that, too — is justified.<\/p>\n We’re afraid for the health and lives of all Americans.<\/p>\n With only 54 percent of Americans fully vaccinated, covid’s delta variant — far more infectious than the first strain — has led to the most recent surge; in many ways worse than earlier surges. As many as 1,500 Americans are now dying each day. To give that number fresh context, that’s roughly equivalent to a Sept. 11 terrorist attack every other day.<\/p>\n We’re afraid for our hospitals, medical staff and patients.<\/p>\n Hospitals in our state — where one-quarter of residents<\/a> over 12 years of age have yet to receive one dose of vaccine — are stressed, overworked, short-staffed and are nearing or at capacity for hospital beds and beds in intensive care units. The state Department of Health announced it is working with hospitals to assure normal operations but is planning for a level of care that includes a “crisis response” and plans for “scarce resource management.”<\/a><\/p>\n “The goal,” a DOH release said, “is to prevent ever having to utilize crisis standards of care anywhere in Washington.”<\/p>\n Already, however, hospitals are canceling non-covid-related surgeries and medical care, including heart surgeries, cancer surgeries and other “elective” procedures that will not seem “elective” to the patients involved.<\/p>\n Providence Regional Medical Center Everett admitted more than 320 covid-19 patients last month, 72 of whom needed ICU treatment. Of those, 96 percent had not been vaccinated. The influx of patients forced the Everett hospital to open one eight-bed satellite ICU, then a second 10-bed unit, though the hospital has had difficulty in hiring the trained nurses necessary to staff the units.<\/p>\n We’re afraid for a school year that has just begun.<\/p>\n As parents and grandparents, we were excited for a return to classrooms and a more normal and physically, emotionally and scholastically healthy routine for students, but we can’t ignore the reports about increasing rates of infection among younger children<\/a>, especially those who cannot yet count on the protection of a vaccine.<\/p>\n