Wednesday, March 18, 2026

Ignoring COVID's Impact

I've never stopped talking about COVID, and there are plenty of people on Twitter and elsewhere who make sure that COVID -- which is still here -- won't be forgotten.

However, there are also plenty of Americans who shrugged off COVID as "just a cold" and who have minimized or ignored it for the most part, preferring to look for conspiracies to explain the pandemic. Those people will never change. 

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Why we don't talk about COVID anymore

By Alissa Widman Neese at Axios 3-18-26 

Six years ago this week, COVID-19 dominated daily life. Schools closed, headlines tracked cases, and Ohio reported its first deaths and postponed a primary election.

Why it matters: Today, the pandemic that killed over 1 million Americans and reshaped society has largely faded from public conversation.

  • That silence isn't unusual — but it could have real consequences, an Ohio State University public health historian says.

Driving the news: Associate professor Marian Moser Jones and other researchers have interviewed over 120 local and state health officials across the U.S. to document how they navigated the pandemic.

  • They hope to create a historical record before memories fade and society moves on.
  • "There's almost been a consensus — in a time when we don't have consensus about a lot — that we're going to move on and not talk about this anymore," Moser Jones tells Axios.

What they've found: Many health care workers witnessed traumatic scenes, including patients dying alone, and endured months of fear and uncertainty before vaccines and treatments existed.

  • And officials, once praised as heroes, became targets of anger and blame.
  • The urge to suppress painful experiences is deeply human, Moser Jones tells Axios.

Flashback: There was a similar desire to move on after the 1918 influenza pandemic, which killed about 675,000 Americans and intertwined with World War I.

Case in point: The library's Dispatch archives show references to "Spanish flu" or "Spanish influenza" — the virus' original misleading name — waned by the 1930s and then mostly disappeared for decades.

  • In 1964, the newspaper's magazine published a four-page retrospective.

Between the lines: A politicized pandemic is hard to collectively mourn, Moser Jones says. Unlike wars or other tragedies, there are no remembrance days or memorials.

  • And by its nature, an endemic virus has no true "end."

Yes, but: Putting the pandemic behind us too quickly makes it hard to assess what worked and what didn't — and whether public health officials are equipped for the next crisis.

The bottom line: "People are going to want to know what happened," Moser Jones says.

  • "Pandemics are going to come back, whether we repress our memories or not."

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