this post was submitted on 25 Feb 2025
120 points (98.4% liked)
Health - Resources and discussion for everything health-related
2635 readers
735 users here now
Health: physical and mental, individual and public.
Discussions, issues, resources, news, everything.
See the pinned post for a long list of other communities dedicated to health or specific diagnoses. The list is continuously updated.
Nothing here shall be taken as medical or any other kind of professional advice.
Commercial advertising is considered spam and not allowed. If you're not sure, contact mods to ask beforehand.
Linked videos without original description context by OP to initiate healthy, constructive discussions will be removed.
Regular rules of lemmy.world apply. Be civil.
founded 2 years ago
MODERATORS
you are viewing a single comment's thread
view the rest of the comments
view the rest of the comments
I don't want to go through another pandemic either. COVID has ravaged my body, so I don't know if I could handle H5N1 anywhere near as well as I could 5 years ago. But does bitching at me about how I may be not exactly correct help that in any way? There's tons of people all over social media spouting full on wrong or outright deceitful information over and over again, and I'm trying to push the narrative towards experts' messages as well as I can. People don't remember information because it's correct, they remember what they hear the most. We can't just sit back and hope the experts are loud enough on their own to combat misinformation.
I apologize for sounding more definitive than the reality. This is probability and statistics, so it's not a sure thing until it actually happens. What I was trying to point out was that as long as we're complacent and allow an "acceptable level" of cases, the probabilities will keep getting worse. I have to simplify something, and I guess I went too far this time. Do you have a better way to phrase it that doesn't get so mired in the details people's eyes will glaze over?