SERIOUS REASONS TO STOP THE SILLY STUFF — We have embarked on the newest less scary stage of the pandemic. Even Hawaii, the last holdout among the 50 states, said today that it too would end mandatory masking. So masks are coming off. People are returning to work (and play.) It's getting harder to find a parking spot. But we still do too many things that are so last stage of the pandemic. Or the stage before that. Things like keeping the Smithsonian's outdoor carousel closed (which Matt Yglesias noted on Twitter the other day) aren't just silly, from an epidemiological point of view. They're counterproductive. Putting the sillier things on the same plane as measures that really do prevent spread of disease makes it easier to ridicule or undermine all Covid mitigation. And that's bad for public health — now and for whatever comes next. "The pandemic theater, of which there has been a lot, has had negative consequences for our ability to successfully manage the pandemic," Bill Hanage, an epidemiologist at Harvard T.C. Chan School of Public Health, emailed Nightly. It's not really clear why we are still doing some of these things months — in some cases now, two years — after we learned a lot more about how the coronavirus does and does not spread. Maybe it's bureaucratic inertia. Maybe it's confusion and excessive caution. Maybe it's just not wanting to admit an error. We do know that the public has often been confused — or outraged — by changing advice and guidelines. Sometimes the advice has changed because the science has evolved, sometimes because the virus has evolved. It was worth shutting things like a merry-go-round down "in the teeth of an oncoming surge of unknown final size barreling into health care," Hanage said. "But that changes as we learn more. There is a tendency to think that any change in guidance implies that your previous advice was wrong. But that is obviously not the case. " Making changes to Covid guidance is, in fact, "following the science." My colleague Myah Ward recently wrote in Nightly about some of the more serious practices that really need to be updated — like the strict limits on family visits to critically ill hospitalized patients. But there are a host of other things people and businesses are still doing that just don't make a whole lot of sense now, even if they seemed like worthwhile precautions in 2020. It's time to end the silly stuff. It only fuels the skeptics, the deniers, and makes it harder to reimpose or reemphasize the measures (masking, distancing, vaccination) that we would need if another, dangerous variant came our way. Here are a few things to rethink: Businesses that have "clean" and "dirty" pen jars. When was the last time anyone got Covid from a pen? Is anyone actually checking to make sure that no customer inadvertently picks up a dirty pen when she wanted a clean one, or mistakenly puts a dirty one in the clean jar? Having hand sanitizer nearby is still welcome — and not just for Covid. But most of us do not live in mortal fear of pens. Grocery stores that still make you pack your own bags if you brought in your eco-friendly reusable ones from home. Those ubiquitous grocery cart handle wipes probably aren't really doing much to protect us from Covid (although I often use them anyway so I don't have to think about why those bars are so sticky; I too once had a toddler). Car insurance companies that won't send an adjuster to look at a damaged vehicle — outside. It's not like the car is going to launch a partisan broadside against an adjuster for wearing a mask. Last year's cloth masks. Particularly those one-layer stretchy ones that keep slipping off. If you still want to mask (and many of us do, at least in some settings) or if you still must mask (in health care settings or public transport), it's well past time to upgrade to an N95 or similar mask that actually works. Some practices that hotels are promoting as they try to lure travelers back — like plastic-wrapped TV remotes. Planning some business travel this month, I saw a hotel that said that its dining rooms were all open but for safety's sake, room service is closed! Also guests have to park their own cars; valet service is suspended. (Even if someone is still worried about having a stranger in their car, a masked valet and an open window would address it.) I did see one hotel that boasted it leaves a mask in every guest's room. How nice! But I had to wonder whether they were high-quality, effective KN94-type masks, and whether the hotel was providing them to its staff, who might need them more than the presumably more affluent and sheltered guests. This list is by no means comprehensive. I happened to walk by the meditation room at an airport the other day — closed for Covid. LaGuardia, apparently, believes we should keep panicking and carry on. And silly stuff isn't always silly. These measures can be painful, creating what Hanage called "wrenching disconnects." We're barring someone from putting a flower on her mother's casket, while allowing tens of thousands of screaming people, some infected, to cram into sports arenas. My personal favorite 2020 artifact remains those questionnaires we still have to fill out at the doctor's office. During one appointment, when Omicron cases in D.C. were sky-high and the rest of the country wasn't much better, I again had to disclose whether I had traveled to any state with high coronavirus spread in the last 14 days (fwiw, the incubation period for Omicron is far shorter than 14 days). I checked "No." But I was tempted to write in: "Yes. Our Planet." Welcome to POLITICO Nightly. Happy 2nd birthday to Nightly. Hope our 3rd is happier. Reach out with news, tips and ideas at nightly@politico.com. Or contact tonight's author on Twitter at @JoanneKenen.
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