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- May 9, 2016
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But a huge part of being able to be accountable for our own actions and health and to stay up to date on facts is having those facts and not having information be politicized.
And public health is rarely dependent on personal accountability. Public health is guaranteed by sound policies and laws implemented that encourage or compel people to follow safe/sanitary practices.
Without such sound policies and laws we have had:
1. Legal child abuse.
2. Deaths on the road due to no drunk driving laws.
3. Deaths due to no seatbelt or child car seat laws.
4. Child labor.
5. Horrifically dangerous workplace conditions in factories.
6. Unsanitary conditions in meat packing plants and other food-related industries.
7. No mandated accurate labeling of food ingredients.
8. Legal dumping of chemicals in water ways and around residences.
9. No poison warnings on dangerous household chemicals.
10. Playgrounds with hard packed surfaces and super high slides (I loved those, BTW).
11. Dams that are allowed to crack and fall into disrepair, causing the deaths of thousands and destruction of entire towns.
Etc. etc.
Respectfully, to suggest that public health and safety should be dependent on individual, personal accountability seems shortsighted to me, and somewhat naive about human nature and how hard it is to get all humans to take care of themselves and protect one another. Not always due to selfishness or greed but also simply ignorance. (And I don’t mean stupidity).
I will give you a case in point about such ignorance.
I was persuaded to some degree, in the past, by anti-vaxxer arguments and anecdote. I watched a bunch of videos of parents showing kids before and after vaccines and how their autism suddenly appeared. It impacts me. But I remember a poster telling me “you’re not understanding the difference between anecdote and scientific research”.
I argued that I understood the difference but there was so much anectodal evidence.
The poster was patient with me and polite but I remained convinced that there could be some connection between autism and vaccines due to possibly constant triggering of small bodies’ immune systems.
But then I read the research as the poster suggested. And kept reading it. It was a lot. Tons of studies. I looked up the authors of the studies to see if there could be any influence. I did my work, expecting to find at least some evidence that vaccines could cause autism.
I was wrong. I had been ignorant. I’m not stupid. I just didn’t have the information necessary to understanding the issue. It’s a good thing I didn’t have little kids who could’ve been affected, at the time I was buying into the anti-vaxxer argument.
How many people are going to spend hours, days, researching an issue? Should public health be dependent on the wisdom of people in their 20’s who are focused on school, establishing a career and socializing? Or people in their 30’s exhausted from raising kids and working their tails off? How about older people who like to play bingo and square dance and talk about their health problems? Should public health be dependent on their personal accountability?
How many Americans are going to be able to do the work necessary to understanding the complexities of health and safety without serious government guidance?
When my health and welfare is dependent on the actions of those around me, I don’t want to leave it up to individualism. I want sound policies guiding the public.
Regardless of what others are doing, I’m confident I’m doing the best I can under the circumstances. My healthcare team, my sources and my decisions are what I’m going with. That’s all I’m saying.