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 We might see our friends get sicker, but we'd also see famous people get ill as well. Bruce Springsteen, who's had COVID multiple times,  has canceled tour dates due to peptic ulcers. Multiple studies have found a strong correlation between COVID infection and long-term gastrointestinal disorders, including--you guessed it--peptic ulcers.  https://www.everydayhealth.com/coronavirus/covid-19-increases-likelihood-of-heartburn-bloating-in-the-next-year/ 
 We recently lost Jimmy Buffett to cancer, and a growing number of studies suggest COVID suppresses our bodies' cancer-fighting abilities. (We won't know with certainty that COVID is oncogenic for years, and that will happen only if and when many more people are diagnosed with cancer.)  https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0300908423001360 
 To be clear, both of these gentlemen may have suffered the same with or without COVID, but that's the danger of what we're doing today.  We see people with illness and think that's normal while ignoring the sudden and tremendous change that occurred in 2020 to lifespans, rates of diabetes and heart disease, and other serious illnesses. https://www.cedars-sinai.org/newsroom/today-young-people-are-more-likely-to-die-of-heart-attacks-post-covid-study-finds-but-why/ 
 We could suppress the rapid mutation of COVID and waves of infections by doing 1 of 3 easy things:  Demand stronger regulations for safe and monitored air in public spaces; wearing masks in crowds; and/or reducing time in crowds, particularly during periods of rising infections (like today!) At the VERY least, we should see continued masking in hospitals where we KNOW COVID infections tend to thrive and cause considerable adverse impact to already vulnerable patients. https://www.cancertherapyadvisor.com/home/cancer-topics/general-oncology/mask-mandates-have-kept-one-cancer-center-free-from-covid-19-others-have-lifted-masking-requirements-despite-patient-concerns/ 
 We've had almost four years to learn the risks and demand more of political and corporate leaders to protect the health and wellbeing of people. Instead, after the briefest period of unevenly embracing non-pharmaceutical interventions, we decided that acting normal was more important than having normal health and lifespans. 
 Some will read this and think I'm being alarmist. You may be right, but a growing number of scientific studies tell me I'm not. (And, as far as I've seen, literally no studies suggest repeated COVID infections are benign.) So, we can ignore the hundreds of studies that tell us to be more cautious--that's up to you--but we can't ignore the implications of our actions in the future. https://docs.google.com/spreadsheets/d/12VbMkvqUF9eSggJsdsFEjKs5x0ABxQJi5tvfzJIDd3U/edit#gid=2023681543 
 Be a bit more careful today, please. Don't play “disability roulette” with your life. https://www.bostonglobe.com/2023/05/26/opinion/long-covid-turns-three-americans-play-disability-roulette/