Top doctors warn woke culture is taking over US medical field and pushing physicians to self-censor research and avoid treating white patients out of fear of being perceived as racist
Several top doctors from some of America s top medical institutions spoke anonymously to journalist Katie Herzog in a piece for Bari Weiss Substack blog
Doctors said they are fearful of speaking out against woke dogma that has taken hold in the medical field now dominated by anti-racist thinking
They said younger generation of medical professionals are forcing field to accept shoddy research because it supports flawed diversity initiatives
In some instances, younger doctors are said to be refusing to treat white patients because they probably deserve whatever happened to them
Did the costs outweigh the benefits? By
May 27, 2021
As government-imposed pandemic lockdowns begin to wind down, policymakers, analysts and citizens turn their attention to the question of how well states and political leaders balanced their costs and benefits.
This topic was the focus of a virtual event, “Are Lockdowns Effective? How to Measure the Impact of COVID-19 Policies,” sponsored by the Mackinac Center for Public Policy. It featured economists Dave Hebert of Aquinas College and Michael Makovi of Northwood University.
In his review of lockdowns, Hebert used a cost-benefit analysis to estimate the optimal balance between their benefits (fewer cases of illness and fewer fatalities) and their costs, both in economic terms and in personal and societal ones.
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Alex Waldron, center, with her two sons Benjamin, 9, and Thomas, 11, in Maynard. (Jesse Costa/WBUR)
The season of sickness starts every September in Alexandria Waldron’s home, right after her three boys ages 9, 11 and 14 go back to school.
“They haven’t been around a lot of other kids,” Waldron says, “and always, two weeks later, almost exactly to the day, our first kid would get sick. Then it would spread through the family. “
It might be strep throat, a stomach bug, a cold, fever or an earache. Once winter hits, Waldron, who lives in Stowe, Mass., would take someone to the doctor once a week. But since a year ago March?
Even after full vaccination against COVID-19, people who have had organ transplants are urged by their doctors to keep wearing masks and taking extra precautions. Research shows the strong drugs they must take to prevent organ rejection can significantly blunt their body s response to the vaccine. DigiPub / Getty Images
Laura Burns was thrilled when she got her second dose of the COVID-19 vaccine three months ago. The 71-year-old thought that with vaccination, she might finally be closer to being able to see her family in Europe again. I have not seen them now for two years, and that s including my stepdaughter. It s very very . that s hard, says Burns, who lives in Austin, Texas.