My wife is a nurse, and a good friend is an ER doc in Omaha. While I, and they do as well, fully agree with you that folks are recovering/treatment is so much improved but that still isn't the point right now. The point is not overwhelming the hospital systems and preventing access to beds and treatments for folks with other issues. My wife's hospital is already back to April Covid bed use and they are having to stop most surgeries because they don't have enough beds. They will still do life threatening ones of course but other things get put off. Things like chemotherapy become much more difficult and dangerous in an overflowing hospital for immunocompromised people. If this was just a normal yearly issue at normal levels I would totally agree, let it run it's course like the flu. But when it overwhelms the whole system it causes trickle down issues. The doctors and nurses are more than burnt out by this point as well. This is also about doing our part for those people.