Covidification

The procedures taken during the COVID-19 (coronavirus) pandemic have been called “Covidification.”
     
“Appreciate the covidification* *clarification” was posted on Twitter by Riksgiving 🦃 on March 12, 2020. “COVIDification” was posted on Twitter by Pte Notso on March 15, 2020. “Another example of the covidification of America” was posted on Twitter by Taylor Sanders on March 17, 2020. “Can confirm we are using the term ‘covidification’ to mean ‘adjusting the plan’” was posted on Twitter by 💩 Richard Hughes 💩 on April 11, 2020.
     
Covidification The wide-ranging social changes being instituted around the world in an attempt to reduce the spread of COVID-19” was entered in the Urban Dictionary on July 7, 2020. “The Covidification of Influenza” was posted on eugyppius on November 30, 2022.
 
         
Wikipedia: COVID-19 pandemic
The COVID-19 pandemic, also known as the coronavirus pandemic, is an ongoing global pandemic of coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) caused by severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2). The novel virus was first identified from an outbreak in Wuhan, China, in December 2019. Attempts to contain failed, allowing the virus to spread to other areas of Asia and later worldwide. The World Health Organization (WHO) declared the outbreak a public health emergency of international concern on 30 January 2020 and a pandemic on 11 March 2020.
     
Twitter
Riksgiving 🦃
@ErikFHelin
Replying to @williamberg and @LucasShanks
Appreciate the covidification*
*clarification
9:42 PM · Mar 12, 2020
   
Twitter
Pte Notso
@SharpishMitch
Replying to @Pepperfire
COVIDification?
11:14 AM · Mar 15, 2020
   
Twitter
Taylor Sanders
@LSUToxicology
Replying to @kidney_boy
Another example of the covidification of America.
2:15 PM · Mar 17, 2020
   
Twitter
Sarah Candler
@sarahgcandler
Huge news for my #primarycare people!! Thank you, @CMSGov!!
Reimbursing audio-only visits!! 💪
Excited to see what healthcare policy innovations will be proven effective and efficient during the #Covidification of healthcare.
Quote Tweet
Shari Erickson (she/her/hers)
@SEricksonACP
·
Mar 30, 2020
Big news tonight! @CMSGov is going to pay for audio only phone calls! Thank you to @SeemaCMS for listening to @ACPinternists ongoing advocacy for this change!
Show this thread
8:08 PM · Mar 30, 2020
   
Twitter
💩 Richard Hughes 💩
@TevildoPofC
Can confirm we are using the term “covidification” to mean “adjusting the plan”.
8:33 PM · Apr 11, 2020
 
Urban Dictionary
Covidification
The wide-ranging social changes being instituted around the world in an attempt to reduce the spread of COVID-19.
As your freedom President, I am trying to protect Americans from the widespread and unnecessary restrictions of Covidification!
by Dr Bunnygirl July 7, 2020
   
Twitter
Chris Roberts
@chrisr2007
Replying to @troyheff and @DrJoannaT
I just wonder how many of the #COVIDIFICATION related changes will stick ie substantively change the   underlying mechanisms of the way we learn teach and assess
7:42 PM · Mar 15, 2021
   
Twitter
nsmurali
@nsmuraligi
COVIDIZATION, COVIDIFICATION, “YOU ARE SO DAMN COVID!” , “YO! ARE YOU COVIDING ME?”,“WHEN YOU SEE A FORK IN THE ROAD, YOU GO COVID”
New words in English, new expressions that say a lot in just one word! Increasingly COVID seems to…https://lnkd.in/gNhZEzQ3
nytimes.com
Can I Stop Isolating If I’m Still Testing Positive for the Virus?
Some people may test positive for the coronavirus for 10 days or longer, but interpreting those results remains difficult, experts said.
2:48 PM · May 31, 2022
 
eugyppius
The Covidification of Influenza
As the relevance of SARS-2 recedes ever further, public health managers seek to apply the same risk magnification, testing, vaccination and hygiene regime to the flu.

eugyppius
Nov 30, 2022
Two weeks ago, NBC News posted a long and disturbing article about “What Covid taught scientists and the public about the flu.” It’s basically as bad as you can imagine. It taught them that “Flu transmission can be stopped” and thus that “Nonpharmaceutical interventions work,” that “Flu can spread via aerosols,” that “‘Long flu’ may be a risk,” that “Asymptomatic flu infections may be underappreciated” and that “People want to test – and they’re good at it.” In short, scientists have learned that if an excess of hygiene hysteria can be stirred up over one unremarkable virus, it can be stirred up over another, and there’s every reason to hope for a new pandemic party in the near future.