Yahoo Answers is shutting down on May 4th, 2021 (Eastern Time) and beginning April 20th, 2021 (Eastern Time) the Yahoo Answers website will be in read-only mode. There will be no changes to other Yahoo properties or services, or your Yahoo account. You can find more information about the Yahoo Answers shutdown and how to download your data on this help page.

Don't we run the risk of doing the following with covid-19:?

"I took the first 12 doses in a 28 day antibiotics run... and I feel great! So I'm not going to take the rest." 

  I mean, everybody that knows anything about taking antibiotics knows that you don't quit halfway through a course of antibiotics or the infection will come roaring back twice as strong, and now immune to those antibiotics.  Shouldn't we hold off until we actually know we've got this thing licked?  I mean, not just on the ropes, BEAT.  I'd propose some kind of agreement where businesses don't have to pay leases, or property taxes while this is going... 

Update:

Sorry if I caused any confusion, I was simply using the "course of antibiotics" as a metaphor for a procedure that one has to complete in a systematic way, or else what you are fighting will come back in an even greater infestation.  

  You might imagine my chagrin when our commander in chief espoused using the Z-Pak (which when he said it, I was thinking of Zicam, which I remembered actually WAS supposed to be a type of antiviral.  This is a case of pharmaceutical

Update 2:

pharmaceutical name mixup like, Xanax and Zantac, on my part.) anyway, he said that the z-pak clears people up etc. but the problem is that the Z-pak is an antibiotic, and he was mistaking one disease for another, and wanted to use the wrong treatment.  Then I realized that just the night before, I had used the example of taking (part of) a course of antibiotics to illustrate the mindset of people who think that everything is better now that they've seen some improvement.  

  I said...

Update 3:

 I said to myself,"Oh! $#^*$@!  Somebody out there will think that I'M espousing using an antibiotic to treat a virus...NAH!  They'll all see that it's metaphor for something that comes back twice as bad if you don't beat it on the first try."  But, sure enough somebody out there DID take it to mean that I thought that we should fight a virus with an antibiotic, let me be clear I don't.  The only real treatment for this one is to not get it, and th

Update 4:

and that involves following a procedure, and not letting up on that procedure once you see a little improvement.

  To make up for the confusion I caused with my metaphor/analogy hybrid, here are some other perhaps equally confusing examples of thinking with your wishbone. Here is some illustrative hyperbole for your reading pleasure:

Update 5:

  Some random guy says,"I poisoned the roaches in both bedrooms, the living room, and half the kithen, the roaches behind the fridge have probably learned their lesson."  He also said, " Fighting this wildfire is really hard, we've hot it knocked down to a couple of hot spots in the south, but they're really small, I'm hungry let's eat dinner, and get a good night's sleep, because this prom isn't going to throw itself!"

Update 6:

On 04-14-2020 I asked the original question, and I'm afraid that not enough people had heard of what the media are now calling,"The Rebound, Spiking, The Surge, The Second Wave, or The Resurgence."  Now it's 04-24-2020 and everybody either is or isn't afraid of a relapse.

2 Answers

Relevance
  • 1 year ago

    There are two concerns at play here. One is the health of the American people and the other is the health of the American economy. If we keep the economy shut down until an effective vaccine is available might cripple the economy to such a degree that it could take 10 years to recover. The other side of the coin is the case if the economy is opened too early and the virus infections jumps to numbers that are not manageable. The probably choice is to do a phased opening where those who may have immunity to the virus can go back to work while the vulnerable such as older people and those with medical problems stay isolated as much as possible. Then as the ability to test and determine who is "safe" and who isn't there may be a way to ramp up the economy. Even then there are likely to be localized problems but that is a chance we will have to take.

  • 1 year ago

    Except that nobody is using antibiotics to treat Covid-19.

Still have questions? Get your answers by asking now.