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by torstenvl
861 days ago
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Well. All animal studies on captivity show negative health effects. All human studies show that stress has negative health effects, and that exercise and time spent outdoors have positive health effects. To the extent that being sedentary and stressed contributed to obesity and/or high blood pressure, there is certainly a plausible causal mechanism worth further study. Additionally, there is evidence of increases in reckless driving — see https://insurancenewsnet.com/innarticle/new-data-reveal-reck... — and domestic violence — see https://news.harvard.edu/gazette/story/2022/06/shadow-pandem... . Whether they were the right policy call or not, it's clear that drastic environment changes had drastic behavioral effects, and that the behavioral effects either provably did have, or, based on all available scientific data, probably could have had a regrettable impact on excess deaths. As societies across the globe engage in introspection on COVID response, it's worth further research and factoring the results into their conclusions. |
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If anything, what this would imply is that we haven't seen yet the completion of excess deaths related to this era. But proving it will become increasingly more difficult as the long-tail blends into the noise.