Commentary

Finding common purpose, or else


 

I am composing this editorial 4 days after the U.S. Capitol was invaded and 10 days before the presidential inauguration. It is impossible to ignore what is happening in our country, but I hesitate to add my thoughts to the overwhelming sea of opinions circulating in standard media, social media, and the dark web. I hope, as do many, that we return to a civil discourse, recognize the voices of all people, respect each other, and return to a belief in science and facts.

Dr. John I. Allen

Dr. John I. Allen

SARS-CoV-2 has devastated the world and will continue to cause preventable deaths until we adopt stricter mitigation measures, vaccinate most people, and develop widespread immunity. We are gaining immense knowledge about this virus, and as gastroenterologists, we are on the front lines in many aspects. A recent article in American Journal of Gastroenterology, among others, emphasized that mild GI symptoms may be the only presenting complaint for people with COVID-19. Responses to COVID-19, such as limits on elective procedures and social distancing, have upended our endoscopic processes and even altered the business models of GI practice. We will never go back to pre-COVID models.

The front page of this month’s GI & Hepatology News features important articles for our practice. One article delves into an extensive guideline from the American Gastroenterological Association on medical management of colonic diverticulitis. In another article, they also describe how efforts to encourage our patients with nonalcoholic fatty liver disease to exercise and manage their diet can make a real difference in their health. Finally, another explores how and why your immunocompromised patients (including those with inflammatory bowel disease) should and can be safely vaccinated for COVID-19.

Meanwhile, we need civility, science, and community. Without common purpose, we will experience the William Forster Lloyd’s Tragedy of the Commons. Incivility has economic and emotional costs, according to the Harvard Business Review. “Weathering,” the deterioration of Black women’s health over time that’s related to continued socioeconomic disadvantage, has multigenerational impacts; for example the Department of Health & Human Services reports that infant mortality among African American women is 2.3 times that of non-Hispanic Whites. Late effects of redlining continue to cause economic, health, and emotional harms (Badger E. “How Redlining’s Racist Effects Lasted for Decades” The New York Times. 2017 Aug 24).

“If Men were angels, no government would be necessary,” James Madison wrote. “In framing a government which is to be administered by men over men, the great difficulty lies in this: you must first enable the government to control the governed; and the next place, oblige it to control itself.”

John I. Allen, MD, MBA, AGAF
Editor in Chief

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