You mean this? It’s *stellar* and factual. Probably helped save many lives by putting together existing research in such a clear manner. There is misinformation by nonexperts but also amazing empirical stuff being compiled by people with requisite skills.https://medium.com/@tomaspueyo/coronavirus-act-today-or-people-will-die-f4d3d9cd99ca …
I didn’t write it because I was out of things to write. It was urgently needed and I couldn’t find something like that to share with people. (The dean of public health at my university and many public health folks have since praised it but at the time I was weird for me.)
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One of the reasons we are so late is that the needed guidance and explanations weren’t there in accessible form. Tweets don’t count. There was an alarming number of stop panicking articles from traditional otherwise trustworthy media, too! Last weeks more people stepped up.
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And some of them don’t have the traditional credentials but are clearly qualified to write the explanations that were so necessary. Both articles you cite in this thread are stellar examples of urgently needed factual public health communication that got people to move.
End of conversation
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