It's a great article (and the author is a well-respected professional and a voice I trust) - there was mention of it on the other side of the fence. However, I think people are focusing on the wrong parts. Towards the end:
Article author wrote:The pandemic is a bedeviling problem that vaccines alone cannot immediately solve. As long as the supply of doses remains limited and the coronavirus continues spreading at high rates across the country, public-health officials need to communicate that the greatest risk reduction comes from a combination of measures that includes good masks, distancing, and ventilation.
That's where we are right now and where we're likely going to be parked until summer, unless something changes.
article author wrote:And officials need to enable the public to take those measures
I'm stuck on '"enable the public to take those measures" when we've been repeatedly told (sometimes with actual threats) to take a hike.
Vaccinations (existing, new) are likely the single greatest invention in our collective lifetimes. They're medically unique in that they provide a benefit to not only the person that receives them, but to the community in which that person lives. The SARS-CoV-2 vaccination is absolutely going to be instrumental in changing our individual interactions, but I'm having a hard time imagining going to see a movie, attending a convention or eating indoors at a restaurant any time soon - even after getting vaccinated. The reason is other people and how they've collectively acted over the last year. I keep coming back to a quote from 2017:
article author wrote:—while recognizing that staying infection-free is not the only thing that matters to people
That's been made abundantly clear unfortunately and it's something I've been struggling to process since last March. For me, I keep coming back to a quote from 2017:
"I don't know how to explain to you why you should care about other people."
Will vaccines change how I'm able to interact with my parents? How they'll be able to interact with their granddaughter? Yes.
Am I going to a concert or a board game convention any time soon, even after I get vaccinated? Absolutely not. I'm still learning that I have extended family members that I'd been seeing regularly are anti-maskers and now anti-vaccine. I can't even process socializing with them ever again at this point.