Anonymous wrote:
Jesus christ you guys are overdramatic.
Im a public health nurse. As long as you teach your kids to wash their hands well (and regularly), to keep a respectable distance, and avoid personal contact they are perfectly fine to go out and see a few friends. What you need to avoid is large groups particularly in tight spaces.
People are panicing and acting like this is the end of the world. We have these disease upticks literally every 2-3 years. It will last a few months until people learn more about the disease.
Locking your kids up does not do anything to help, denying them any social activities only makes it far more scary then it already is.
Jesus christ, you sound like you only play a “pubic health nurse” on tv (and fyi, your acting sucks).
You come in here and announce that THE “public health nurse” has arrived, first order of business? Throw an insult at concerned parents.
Your blatant lack of sensitivity and understanding may not be a fireable offense, but your careless disregard for spreading misinformation & falsehoods during a crisis definitely would be (and from what I hear.. ignorant, apathetic, sanctimonious “public health nurses” aren’t in very high demand nowadays).
You should print out your post and ask one of the doctors that you work with to peruse it on over for you, then ask them for constructive criticism.
I imagine it playing out like this... you’d be sent to sensitivity training STAT, admonished for your blatant lack of knowledge in your field of EXPERTISE (shouldn’t a “public health nurse” be well informed in silly little things like global pandemics?) and lastly, sent back to RN school for a refresher course on how to be a kind, compassionate, well informed nurse.
Oh, and while you’re there, take a course on how to be a decent human being, because uh, DAMN.