Democracy Dies in Darkness

My grandfather died of covid-19. More empathy from everyone may have prevented such deaths in this pandemic.

Perspective by
May 2, 2020 at 2:00 p.m. EDT
In a hospital in Rome, a doctor and a nurse in protective gear embrace at the end of their shift at an intensive care unit treating covid-19 patients last month. (Alberto Pizzoli/AFP/Getty Images)

I am a medical student in my third year of studies. For medical students, this is the point at which, after two years of book learning, we rotate through hospital clerkships that give us our first experience of delivering hands-on care to inpatients.

Earlier in the year (it feels like many lifetimes ago), I read that covid-19 was “just the flu.” We heard from scientific sources and popular media that other maladies were much worse, and that it would be a mistake to overreact to this one. Like many people, I accepted these assurances without too much concern. It all seemed a bit remote to me — the way I imagine issues like food stamps may seem to a politician who has never needed them.