7 Hard and Crucial Lessons of Covid-19

An invisible virus exposes critical blind spots in science and society. But will we learn?

Robert Roy Britt
Elemental

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Photo: MediaNews Group/Long Beach Press-Telegram/Getty Images

Plaguing the world for more than a year, the coronavirus has forced reckonings in everything from scientific understanding to heart-wrenching inequities in health care and the economy. Given the human tendency to ignore history, here, for the record, are seven vital lessons we can take from the Covid-19 pandemic, which could start benefiting us now and for generations to come.

1. Virus science just underwent a paradigm shift

Sanitizing groceries and drowning our homes with bleach was wrongheaded, in hindsight. That early advice reflected an outdated view of how the coronavirus, influenza, and other respiratory viruses spread, some of it based on experiments done in the 1930s.

Combining expertise in atmospheric chemistry, aerosol physics, and disease transmission, a few often-ignored scientists were pointing out many months ago how SARS-CoV-2, the Covid-causing coronavirus, really gets around:

“The main mode of transmission is through the air, by breathing in aerosols that contain the virus,” explains one of those experts, Jose-Luis Jimenez, PhD, a chemistry professor at the University of Colorado…

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Robert Roy Britt
Elemental

Editor of Aha! and Wise & Well on Medium + the Writer's Guide at writersguide.substack.com. Author of Make Sleep Your Superpower: amazon.com/dp/B0BJBYFQCB