Overdose deaths far outpace COVID-19 deaths in San Francisco
#COVID #overdose #mentalhealth #crisis #california
There's things worse than a virus.
https://apnews.com/article/san-francisco-coronavirus-pandemic-a48a148efadbeaa1181148ea367c4d68
@SecondJon Oh my, do you know how fast this spreads? How long before this is all over the world? What is its infection rate?
@trinsec great point that only asking questions that apply to one situation makes us blind to other situations.
@trinsec I agree with how you ended this. I don't think people are getting covid then overdosing. So the cause isn't directly covid. I'd guess the driving factor is government response to covid. And if that's the case then we need to resolve that.
And there's no need to say we can't have a covid vaccine AND address the causes behind the mental health crisis which in at least this case is taking more lives than covid.
@trinsec that's a bit of a leap. The virus itself doesn't make it worse, as we've agreed it's unlikely that people are killing themselves because they got covid.
The government response to the virus makes it worse, and I think it's unwise to assume that addressing a medical problem will resolve a political problem that's causing the increase in suicide.
Its sort of like thinking..... My spouse beats me because the dishes were dirty, clearly the problem is the dishes.
@SecondJon Nah, I'm not talking about getting covid and then overdosing. I'm talking about a 'oh shit, we can't go out, I could get infected, oh woe is me, let me grab some drugs to possibly try and forget about all this' type deal.
And yes, it doesn't mean this should be left untreated until Covid is finished (because let's be honest, how long is that going to take?)
But as I read this, California's mental health support seems to be lacking already, so not sure how you can improve that right now WITH the pandemic going on, alas.
But the original point you made was 'this is worse than the virus', and that's what I argued against. The virus makes it worse.