U.S. in ‘Fragile State’ as Election Nears

By Roger Chriss, PNN Columnist

The United States is about to have its national election. And for the first time in American history, the election will happen amid a pandemic.

The country is deeply divided, unsure about how to address the coronavirus, what to do about health insurance or drug overdoses, and which way to move forward on social justice, racial inequality and socioeconomic divisions.

In the realm of public health, the coronavirus predominates as the country faces another surge in infections, with a record count of nearly 100,000 new cases Friday. Hospitalizations and deaths are rising across the nation.

“As we enter the coming months, which include a national election and many holidays, our country is in a fragile state. Many people are understandably worried about the days and weeks ahead,” Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia warned in a blog post.

“Wearing masks and resisting the temptation to take part in medium to large gatherings that include people who are not members of your immediate family/small bubble are things we can and must do to protect ourselves and our loved ones. We encourage all to be safe out there, and to get out and vote safely, if you have not done so already.”

In addition to the pandemic, overdose deaths are rising again, largely due to illicit fentanyl and other street drugs. The United Nations reports that synthetic cannabinoids are also a rising threat. And if all this weren’t enough, Washington state is seeing an invasion of murder hornets.

“Whatever the outcome of the election, the coming winter will be difficult. And whoever occupies the White House on January 21 will probably have to deal with another major epidemic before his term is over,” journalist Ed Yong writes in the Atlantic. “The U.S. has now clearly seen what happens when a pandemic occurs under Trump. It is an experiment that no one should ever want to rerun.”

The election process itself is fraught this year. NPR is reporting that hundreds of polling places in Iowa will be closed on Election Day due to the coronavirus. Voting for people quarantined or newly diagnosed with Covid-19 could also be difficult if they can’t vote by mail.

The election outcome is uncomfortably uncertain. Politico assembled a day-by-day guide to all the possible outcomes from November 3 to January 20, from recounts to Supreme Court intervention. If President Trump loses, Politico also put together a list of what he might do during his remaining days in office, from mass pardons to a revenge campaign against the “Deep State.”

Election Pain

This is the stuff that nightmares are made of. Some people are abandoning social media, going off Twitter or internet discussion forums, or deleting news apps and silencing their phones. Others are engaging in “radical self-care” by playing video games or binging on old TV shows all day long, or hibernating their way to November 4. There is no end of online discussion about how to get offline and avoid discussion of the pandemic, politics and election outcomes.

But after the election, some things will not change. People with chronic disorders will still have the same diagnoses, the same treatment options, and the same prognoses as they did before. Election outcomes matter, but not for some things.  

Most people with chronic painful disorders have already survived far worse than the coronavirus or this election. Election pain may lead to a sleepless night or two for some people, but chronic pain can lead to sleepless nights for years. Insomnia is a routine part of small fiber neuropathy, complex regional pain syndrome and ankylosing spondylitis.

Election pain may create digestive problems like GERD or IBS for some people, but chronic painful disorders can include a lifetime of gastrointestinal distress. The ability to eat comfortably and digest reliably is not something that people with Ehlers-Danlos syndrome, pancreatitis or inflammatory bowel disease enjoy.

Election pain may make the time after November 3 seem uncertain, but for people with disorders like epilepsy, multiple sclerosis or sickle cell disease, that uncertainty is normal. Life is never stable when your body may misfire at any time.

Election pain may make life even harder for people with these disorders. The best we can do is stick to our routines and stay focused on our health. Come the results of the election, we can be gracious. And if all else fails and everything is hellish, just keep going.

Roger Chriss lives with Ehlers Danlos syndrome and is a proud member of the Ehlers-Danlos Society. Roger is a technical consultant in Washington state, where he specializes in mathematics and research.