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It鈥檚 Time to Scare People About COVID

I still remember exactly where I was sitting decades ago, during the short film shown in class: For a few painful minutes, we watched a woman talking mechanically, raspily through a hole in her throat, pausing occasionally to gasp for air.

The public service message: This is what can happen if you smoke.

I had nightmares about that ad, which today would most likely be tagged with a trigger warning or deemed unsuitable for children. But it was supremely effective: I never started smoking and doubt that few if any of my horrified classmates did either.

When the government required television and radio stations to give $75 million in free聽聽between 1967 and 1970 鈥 many of them terrifyingly graphic 鈥 smoking rates plummeted. Since then, numerous smoking聽聽have proved聽. Some even featured celebrities, like Yul Brynner鈥檚聽聽with a warning after he died from lung cancer: 鈥淣ow that I鈥檓 gone, don鈥檛 smoke, whatever you do, just don鈥檛 smoke.鈥

As the United States faces out-of-control spikes from COVID-19, with people refusing to take recommended, often even mandated, precautions, our public health announcements from governments, medical groups and health care companies feel lame compared with the urgency of the moment. A mix of clever catchphrases, scientific information and calls to civic duty, they are virtuous and profoundly dull.

The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention urges people to wear masks in聽聽that feature scientists and doctors talking about wanting to send kids safely to school or protecting freedom.

Quest Diagnostics made a video featuring people washing their hands, talking on the phone, playing checkers. The message: 鈥.鈥

As cases were mounting in September, the Michigan government produced聽聽with the exhortation, 鈥淪pread Hope, Not Covid,鈥 urging Michiganders to put on a mask 鈥渇or your community and country.鈥

Forget that. Mister Rogers-type nice isn鈥檛 working in many parts of the country. It鈥檚 time to make people scared and uncomfortable. It鈥檚 time for some sharp, focused, terrifying realism.

鈥淔ear appeals can be聽,鈥 said聽, associate professor of psychology at New York University, who co-authored a paper in Nature about how聽聽efforts. (They may not be needed as much in places like New York, he noted, where people experienced the constant sirens and the makeshift hospitals.)

I鈥檓 not talking fear-mongering, but showing in a straightforward and graphic way what can happen with the virus.

From what I could find, the state of California came close to showing the urgency: a soft-focus聽聽of a person on a ventilator, featuring the sound of a breathing machine, but not a face. It exhorted people to wear a mask for their friends, moms and grandpas.

But maybe we need a PSA featuring someone actually on a ventilator in the hospital. You might see that person 鈥渂ucking the vent鈥 鈥 bodies naturally rebel against the machine forcing pressurized oxygen into the lungs, which is why patients are typically sedated.

(Because I had witnessed this suffering as a practicing doctor, I was always upfront about the trauma with loved ones of terminally ill patients when they were trying to decide whether to consent to a relative being put on a ventilator. It sounds as easy as hooking someone to an IV. It鈥檚 not.)

Another message could feature a patient lying in an ICU bed, immobile, tubes in the groin, with a mask delivering 100% oxygen over the mouth and nose 鈥 eyes wide with fear, watching the saturation numbers rise and dip on the monitor over the bed.

Maybe some PSAs should feature a so-called COVID long hauler, the 5% to 10% of people for whom recovery takes months. Perhaps a professional athlete like the National Football League鈥檚 Ryquell Armstead, 24, who聽聽with serious lung issues and missed the season.

These PSAs might sound harsh, but they might overcome our natural denial. 鈥淥ne consistent research finding is that even when people see and understand risks, they underestimate the risks to themselves,鈥 Van Bavel said. Graphs, statistics and reasonable explanations don鈥檛 do it. They haven鈥檛 done it.

Only after Chris Christie, an adviser to President Donald Trump, experienced COVID, did he start聽聽about mask-wearing: 鈥淲hen you have seven days in isolation in an ICU, though, you have time to do a lot of thinking,鈥 Christie said, suggesting that people, 鈥渇ollow CDC guidelines in public no matter where you are and wear a mask to protect yourself and others.鈥

We hear from many who resist taking precautions. They say, 鈥淚 know someone who had it and it鈥檚 not so bad.鈥 Or, 鈥淚t鈥檚 just like the flu.鈥

Sure, most longtime smokers don鈥檛 end up with lung cancer 鈥 or tethered to an oxygen tank 鈥 either. (That, in fact, was the justification of smokers like my father, whose two-pack-a-day habit contributed to his death at 47 of a heart attack.)

These new ads will seem hard to watch. 鈥淲e live in a Pixar era,鈥 Van Bavel reflected, with traditional fairy tales now stripped of their gore and violence.

But studies have shown that聽聽about the effects of smoking were the most effective at persuading folks to quit. And quitting smoking is much harder than maintaining physical distance and mask-wearing.

Once a vaccine has proved successful and enough people are vaccinated, the pandemic may well be in the rearview mirror. In the meantime, the creators of public health messaging should stop favoring the cute, warm and dull. And 鈥 at least sometimes 鈥 scare you.

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