What are the complications? Death? Weeks in the hospital? Lifelong complications?
I suspect that if there was even 1-in-100,000 chance of that kind of consequence from regularly wearing masks, I would have heard about it by now. But if you have a reference to actual incidents (not just speculation that it’s possible, but actual people who had these kinds of very very serious problems), I’d be interested to see that.
I want to consider possible impacts of my decisions that are either (1) common, (2) rare but catastrophic. MIS-C is not super catastrophic, but it’s fatal if you’re not promptly hospitalized, and occasionally fatal even if you are, if I understand correctly. So it enters into consideration, despite being rare. And even so I wound up declaring that MIS-C risk is too low to be decision relevant. I have a hard time imagining that wearing a mask will lead to consequences anywhere remotely as serious as MIS-C. So it wouldn’t enter into my consideration unless it was very common, like >1%.
What are the complications? Death? Weeks in the hospital? Lifelong complications?
I suspect that if there was even 1-in-100,000 chance of that kind of consequence from regularly wearing masks, I would have heard about it by now. But if you have a reference to actual incidents (not just speculation that it’s possible, but actual people who had these kinds of very very serious problems), I’d be interested to see that.
I want to consider possible impacts of my decisions that are either (1) common, (2) rare but catastrophic. MIS-C is not super catastrophic, but it’s fatal if you’re not promptly hospitalized, and occasionally fatal even if you are, if I understand correctly. So it enters into consideration, despite being rare. And even so I wound up declaring that MIS-C risk is too low to be decision relevant. I have a hard time imagining that wearing a mask will lead to consequences anywhere remotely as serious as MIS-C. So it wouldn’t enter into my consideration unless it was very common, like >1%.