16 min listen
Why our risk of COVID-19 is our responsibility, not someone else’s.
Why our risk of COVID-19 is our responsibility, not someone else’s.
ratings:
Length:
8 minutes
Released:
May 26, 2020
Format:
Podcast episode
Description
Data from the United States and Europe shows that those with the highest risk of severe cases of COVID-19 and death from the virus are the elderly, and those with pre-existing health conditions.
If you are healthy, you have an extremely low risk of severe illness. Like really low.
If you’re dealing with one of the following conditions, you are not healthy and your risk of a severe case of COVID-19, if you get infected, is much greater:
Overweight and obesity Type II DiabetesHeart diseaseHigh blood pressureRespiratory conditionsCancer
Inflammation and a suppressed immune system are universal among all of these conditions. If you have two or three, things are likely a lot worse.
Technically, having Type I diabetes also raises risk if it isn't properly managed. But type I is usually genetic, unless it’s developed from extreme cases of type II diabetes. Provided type I is properly managed, it shouldn’t affect someone’s risk.
Cancer is caused by a variety of reasons, some of which are lifestyle-related. The rest of the conditions are much more likely to be the result of lifestyle choices.
If pre-existing conditions open the door for SARS-CoV-2, why aren’t we putting more attention on those conditions?
Over the past several decades, pharmaceuticals have helped people live somewhat normal lives, while they continue to make the same lifestyle choices that led to the conditions that led to the medications.
For example, insulin or metformin helps people live longer while still being able to eat the foods that brought on their diabetes, to begin with.
The problem is, even with medications, your body and its systems don’t function right. As a result, your immune system can’t combat diseases, such as COVID-19, like it should be able to.
COVID-19 isn’t the real risk to your health. Diabetes, overweight and obesity, inflammation, and a lack of overall fitness are the real risks. SARS-CoV-2 just exploits the way those risks make us vulnerable.
The good news is, the death rate related to SARS-CoV-2 is nowhere near what was suggested at the beginning of the pandemic. The bad news is, nobody seems to be telling the public they need to immediately address any preventable health conditions they have.
There's more attention on masks than a healthy metabolism. It makes no sense.
We need more candor to change the culture
The only way to wake people up to the risks of poor lifestyle and nutrition choices is to be honest.
We have to change the perception of lifestyle diseases, which means we need to communicate with a little more candor, even of some people choose to be offended by it.
If we can’t talk about the stuff that harms us and our society because it makes someone feel bad, we remove the emotions that spur people to change.
Before we can change, we need to wrestle through the reality of our current state, and the pain that precedes the willingness to change.
This goes against the culture of safety that’s crept into our society over the past decade. In a culture of safety, those who might say or do something that another person could find offensive gets silenced.
A culture that allows the concept of “safety” to creep so far that it equates emotional discomfort with physical danger is a culture that encourages people to systematically protect one another from the very experiences embedded in daily life that they need in order to become strong and healthy.The Coddling of the American Mind, Greg Lukianoff, Jonathan Haidt
If public health is a priority, why not prime the public on health-promoting habits instead of fostering fear?
These lifestyle diseases cost the healthcare system enough already. Now, COVID-19 is yet another disease that puts those with these conditions at greater risk.
What if we focused on fixing these problems instead? What if we put more focus on:
getting people in the gym and building muscle, which helps control blood sugar and improves body compo...
If you are healthy, you have an extremely low risk of severe illness. Like really low.
If you’re dealing with one of the following conditions, you are not healthy and your risk of a severe case of COVID-19, if you get infected, is much greater:
Overweight and obesity Type II DiabetesHeart diseaseHigh blood pressureRespiratory conditionsCancer
Inflammation and a suppressed immune system are universal among all of these conditions. If you have two or three, things are likely a lot worse.
Technically, having Type I diabetes also raises risk if it isn't properly managed. But type I is usually genetic, unless it’s developed from extreme cases of type II diabetes. Provided type I is properly managed, it shouldn’t affect someone’s risk.
Cancer is caused by a variety of reasons, some of which are lifestyle-related. The rest of the conditions are much more likely to be the result of lifestyle choices.
If pre-existing conditions open the door for SARS-CoV-2, why aren’t we putting more attention on those conditions?
Over the past several decades, pharmaceuticals have helped people live somewhat normal lives, while they continue to make the same lifestyle choices that led to the conditions that led to the medications.
For example, insulin or metformin helps people live longer while still being able to eat the foods that brought on their diabetes, to begin with.
The problem is, even with medications, your body and its systems don’t function right. As a result, your immune system can’t combat diseases, such as COVID-19, like it should be able to.
COVID-19 isn’t the real risk to your health. Diabetes, overweight and obesity, inflammation, and a lack of overall fitness are the real risks. SARS-CoV-2 just exploits the way those risks make us vulnerable.
The good news is, the death rate related to SARS-CoV-2 is nowhere near what was suggested at the beginning of the pandemic. The bad news is, nobody seems to be telling the public they need to immediately address any preventable health conditions they have.
There's more attention on masks than a healthy metabolism. It makes no sense.
We need more candor to change the culture
The only way to wake people up to the risks of poor lifestyle and nutrition choices is to be honest.
We have to change the perception of lifestyle diseases, which means we need to communicate with a little more candor, even of some people choose to be offended by it.
If we can’t talk about the stuff that harms us and our society because it makes someone feel bad, we remove the emotions that spur people to change.
Before we can change, we need to wrestle through the reality of our current state, and the pain that precedes the willingness to change.
This goes against the culture of safety that’s crept into our society over the past decade. In a culture of safety, those who might say or do something that another person could find offensive gets silenced.
A culture that allows the concept of “safety” to creep so far that it equates emotional discomfort with physical danger is a culture that encourages people to systematically protect one another from the very experiences embedded in daily life that they need in order to become strong and healthy.The Coddling of the American Mind, Greg Lukianoff, Jonathan Haidt
If public health is a priority, why not prime the public on health-promoting habits instead of fostering fear?
These lifestyle diseases cost the healthcare system enough already. Now, COVID-19 is yet another disease that puts those with these conditions at greater risk.
What if we focused on fixing these problems instead? What if we put more focus on:
getting people in the gym and building muscle, which helps control blood sugar and improves body compo...
Released:
May 26, 2020
Format:
Podcast episode
Titles in the series (100)
What a Man Needs From You to Be His Best by Tom Nikkola | VIGOR Training