I haven't found hard stats, but the leading causes of pneumonia are bacterial and viral infections. I don't believe discounting the other causes would affect the figures that much (especially given I said 20,000 and the numbers seem to be closer to 30,000). At this point, I think we're splitting hairs - the point is many thousands of deaths could be prevented each year if we were willing to live with lockdowns in perpetuity, but we aren't. I guess we sort of make the judgement we'd rather live in a society where we don't have constant lockdowns and can expect to live to about 80, than live in a society where all get to live past 90 but live half of our lives under lockdowns.
I doubt I'll be able to find it again, but I remember an article on a university website I read about a year ago, which suggested the reason people hate and don't always go along with Covid restrictions is basically because they're so inefficient - i.e. - you have to restrict so many lives in so many ways to avoid just one potential death, that people don't see the direct connection with their own actions and, on some level, don't feel it's worth it. It's the same with climate change, which will cause / is causing millions of deaths worldwide; there are lots of little things we could all do more of to reduce the impact; but we struggle to relate our own individual efforts to the overall picture.
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Date: 2022-01-03 11:48 am (UTC)I doubt I'll be able to find it again, but I remember an article on a university website I read about a year ago, which suggested the reason people hate and don't always go along with Covid restrictions is basically because they're so inefficient - i.e. - you have to restrict so many lives in so many ways to avoid just one potential death, that people don't see the direct connection with their own actions and, on some level, don't feel it's worth it. It's the same with climate change, which will cause / is causing millions of deaths worldwide; there are lots of little things we could all do more of to reduce the impact; but we struggle to relate our own individual efforts to the overall picture.