In 1981, doctors in New York and Los Angeles saw healthy young men sicken and die within months, their immune systems apparently destroyed.
The deaths set off a
frantic search for the culprit. By 1983 virologists had identified a novel
pathogen they would call Human Immunodeficiency Virus.
Over the next decade,
scientists learned much more about HIV, which early on had a fatality rate
close to 100 percent, worse even than Ebola or smallpox. Ultimately they tamed
it - perhaps the greatest success for scientific and medical research in the
late 20th century.
But the political story of AIDS is much trickier. Scientists realized
quickly that gay men and intravenous drug users were at far higher risk of
contracting HIV than the general public. But they feared people might not
support funding for AIDS research - and stigmatize those groups further - if
they explained that reality openly.
So they didn’t.
As Smithsonian Magazine
reported in 2013:
“Federally-funded campaigns sought to address a large
number of people from all backgrounds--male, female, homosexual or
heterosexual. The America Responds to AIDS campaign, created by the CDC, ran
from 1987 to 1996 and became a central part of the "everyone is at
risk" message…”
The deception probably increased the public’s willingness
to fund research. But it came with serious side effects. Smithsonian went on to
explain:
“Some AIDS organizations, especially those providing
service to communities at the highest risk for contracting HIV, saw the
campaign as diverting money and attention away from the communities that needed
it the most.”
It also caused needless fear
in people at vanishingly low risk, especially heterosexual women.
Perhaps most important, it
was fundamentally untrue.
That fact should matter to
anyone who believes truth - even unpleasant truth - ought to drive public
policy decisions.
Which brings us to COVID.
SARS-COV-2 isn’t even in
the same time zone as HIV as a killer. But it is like HIV in one crucial way.
It plays favorites.
After a year, most of us
know that the elderly are at much higher risk from coronavirus (though even
well-informed people may not be aware HOW much higher the risk is).
But what public health
authorities have gone out of their way to obscure is how much obesity -
especially severe obesity - drives the risk of the coronavirus in younger
people.
In April, British
researchers published a definitive paper on the subject in The Lancet Diabetes
& Endocrinology, a peer-reviewed journal. The researchers examined the
medical records of almost 7 million people in England to look at the link
between obesity and severe outcomes from Covid, including hospitalization and
death.
The topline findings show
only a moderate link between extra weight and Covid risk. But when the
researchers looked more closely, they found that’s because in older people,
being overweight does NOT drive excess risk.
So the researchers divided
the patients into four age ranges: 20-39, 40-59, 60-79, and over 80. They found that in the two younger groups -
including adults up to age 60 - being obese was associated with nearly ALL the
risk that Covid would lead
to intensive care or death. The findings held even after they adjusted for many
different potential confounding factors, like smoking, non-weight-related
illnesses, and wealth.
The excess risk was
extremely high even for people who weren’t morbidly obese - defined as a
body-mass index of 40 or more. A person between 40 and 60 with a BMI of 35 -
someone who is 230 pounds and 5’8” - had about five times the risk of dying of
Covid of a person of normal weight. For younger adults, the excess risk was
even higher, and for morbidly obese people even higher still.
In contrast, people of normal weight under 40 are at essentially no
risk of death from Covid. The
researchers found their rate to be under 1 in 10,000 per year. Even in the 40
to 59 age range, normal-weight adults had an annual risk well under 1 in 1,000.
The researchers did not include those stunning findings in the main body
of the paper, only its appendix. Still, they were clear in their discussion
about the overall results:
“Our findings from this
large population-based cohort emphasise that excess weight is associated with
substantially increased risks of severe COVID-19 outcomes, and one of the most
important modifiable risk factors identified to date.”
In fact, the findings
suggest that for people under 60, weight loss would be the single best way to
reduce the risk of Covid - probably even more than a vaccine (and with no side
effects).
But of course you haven’t heard about this paper.
No one has. The
public health establishment has decided that an honest discussion of who is
really at risk from Covid might smack of victim-blaming - just as it did a
generation ago with HIV.
This time, though, we haven’t just frightened a bunch of
people at essentially no risk. Our viral lockdown theater has been far more
destructive, for kids who have lost a year of school and everyone else. In one
final irony, lockdown-related weight gain may have actually worsened the risks
last year.
It’s
long past time to tell the truth.
https://alexberenson.substack.com/p/why-covid-is-like-aids