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https://www.nytimes.com/interactive/2020/12/09/us/covid-hospitals-icu-capacity.html
Access to healthcare is a central. We know hospitals are already filling up, healthcare workers are already exhausted, and we're entering the historic high flu season where these kinds of viruses have an easy time spreading. With the estimate that 30% of the population will have contracted C19 by year's end, there's still at least 50% vulnerable to exposure and maybe more.
For those who do get very sick, their outcomes can be greatly affected by access to healthcare. My doctor last month told me she already couldn't keep up with demand. I'm sure that's common and will get worse. What does that mean to average citizen? Your doctor may be very stretched trying to give you individualized attention. If we or our loved ones need the hospital, the ratio of workers to patients will be substandard. If we go back and look at the data early this year, it's apparent that overburdened hospitals had significantly worse patient outcomes on average. Care to patient ratios are huge.
Lastly, there is light at the end of the tunnel. We're in the home stretch. It's not like those protected from getting sick this winter (by limiting spread) will just get sick in the near term anyway and die or have lasting health issues regardless. Being able to avoid exposure this last stretch of 3-6 months means they can survive long enough to benefit from the vaccines underway.
Thinking this way doesn't mean I agree with shutting everything down. It means I see why it's worth it for me to adjust our (my family's) activities, especially when I hardly consider it a 'sacrifice'. Personally I don't feel like I'm losing out much by temporarily changing some of our habits like giving people space in public, condensing the number of public interactions we have, not gathering in large groups, and wearing a mask when indoor public spaces or outdoors in close proximity. It doesn't have to be identical for everybody but I'm pretty sure there's adjustments we all can find to help reduce spread and I believe it does matter now... and in the long run.