The Jewish Faucis: Orthodox Doctors Battle Covid — And Disinformation — In Orthodox Communities

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    Rabbi Dr. Aaron Glatt, an epidemiologist and rabbi, giving his weekly COVID update on Zoom. (Screenshot from YouTube)

    BROOKLYN (JTA) – The doctor burst into public view in the pandemic’s early days, vaulting from behind the scenes to the front lines of a crisis bringing his community to its knees. Community members hung on his every word and changed their behavior because of him.

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    Seven months later, he still has his adherents, but he also knows that weighing in about ways to curb the spread of COVID-19 comes with a cost — from being dismissed at best to facing violent threats from people who are tired of restrictions as the pandemic wears on. He’s still speaking out, but increasingly to a smaller group of people who hardly need to be reminded to wear masks and socially distance while those who have relaxed their behavior are no longer listening.

    It’s not just Anthony Fauci. It’s Aaron Glatt, Avi Rosenberg, Stuart Ditchek and others — doctors in Orthodox Jewish communities across the New York region and beyond who emerged as beacons of science and sanity at a terrifying time, and now face a community where resistance and disinformation are becoming more prevalent just as cases are rising to record numbers across the country.

    Ditchek said he’d heard people refer to him and several other Orthodox doctors as the “Jewish Faucis,” though he was a bit sheepish about the comparison.

    “I assure you that my qualifications and intellect are not on a level anywhere close to Dr. Anthony Fauci,” he said, noting his admiration for the infectious diseases expert. “We are just fulfilling our responsibilities to help save lives.”

    Orthodox doctors living in Orthodox communities have served in a number of new roles over the course of the past six months — providing medical guidance to COVID patients far beyond the confines of their day jobs, advising on quarantine procedures and shaping policies for camps and schools to reopen. And now they’re dealing with a threat nearly on par with the threat posed by the disease itself: the spread of disinformation and distrust of the medical establishment in a community that is ready for a return to normality.

    For Orthodox doctors, it’s not uncommon during normal times to get calls or a knock on the door on Shabbat from a community member with a medical question.

    But the requests for advice skyrocketed this spring, as the pandemic descended on the United States. By how much? “Certainly a hundred-fold would not be incorrect,” said Dr. Aaron Glatt, the chief of infectious diseases and hospital epidemiologist at Mount Sinai South Nassau on Long Island and an assistant rabbi at the Young Israel of Woodmere, a large Orthodox synagogue.

    As the calls and emails increased, Glatt said, community members and local rabbis asked him to provide regular updates to his community in the Five Towns on Long Island, one of the largest Orthodox communities in the New York area. Soon he was giving weekly Zoom updates on Saturday nights that attracted as many as 1,000 people, with thousands more watching on YouTube, and sending out written updates and guidance to a listserv.

    Glatt, who is both a rabbi and a doctor, frequently lamented that his COVID updates drew greater attendance than a Torah class would.

    “If a vaccine comes out, then b’ezras hashem [with God’s help] I’m out of business on these Saturday nights,” he said in his Sept. 5 update. “I would like to reserve it to give a shiur [class] instead on some wonderful Torah subject and would love to see a thousand people come in for that rather than the numbers that we’ve had for some other shiurim [classes,] but that’s a wishful thought.”

    But around the same time as that address, pushback against Glatt’s recommendations began brewing in his community. Weddings were being held with long guest lists again and shared shabbat meals were resuming. A group of 100 doctors in the Long Island community, including Glatt, published a letter asking the community to continue placing their trust in the local doctors after they noticed the widespread relaxing of mask wearing and social distancing. At the time, one of the initiators of the letter cited local influential people who were fomenting anti-mask resistance in the community.

    Then in late September, an anonymous letter circulated on social media accusing Glatt of promoting masks as “magic” and of leading a “cult.”

    “We are upset because you only seem to care about Covid itself and the elderly and vulnerable,” the anonymous authors wrote. “Much the same way that Fauci espouses policy based upon Covid public health alone, you too seem to ignore many aspects of the effects of Covid and government lockdowns on our lives.”

    To Glatt, the personal attacks on him are not what worried him the most. It was the message the letter sent to community members who were trying to follow public health guidance. “I’m more upset about that than anything else, that they’re convincing people unfortunately who are otherwise doing the right thing to now do the wrong thing,” he said.

    On Sunday, local activists gathered for a rally advocating for religious freedom and in support of Donald Trump. Speakers advocated for hydroxychloroquine, a drug that was used earlier in the pandemic to treat COVID but was later found to be ineffective, and questioned the efficacy of masks and COVID testing.

    “I would say 99% of the people have been very kind, they’ve been very nice and they have expressed thanks and just been very nice, that’s the vast vast majority,” Glatt said. The anonymous letter, he said, “was the first time of anything of that nature.”

    Dr. Stuart Ditchek, a pediatrician in Brooklyn’s Midwood section, said he was appalled by the letter attacking Glatt but noted that many of the critics of Orthodox doctors have chosen to remain anonymous.

    “Every frum physician has to do this, they have to engage locally,” said Dr. Stuart Ditchek, an Orthodox pediatrician in Brooklyn.

    “Those voices are few…they’re never with names,” Ditchek said. “I will tell you that all of the frum [observant] physicians I know…they all put their names to whatever advisory we put out.”

    Ditchek also began giving video updates on the threat of COVID and the steps needed to prevent its spread in the Orthodox community back in March. He issued early warnings in New York City, urging schools and synagogues to close before Purim, the holiday in March when many in New York’s Orthodox communities celebrated and likely contracted the virus.

    To the pediatrician, who formerly had little public profile beyond his own practice and the nonprofit he runs benefiting children with life-threatening or life-shortening illnesses, it was important to have local doctors speaking to community members with whom they already had a high level of trust.

    “Every frum physician has to do this, they have to engage locally,” he said. “The only way to solve this problem within the communities is to educate within our own communities because they trust us and we have so many relationships.”

    For Dr. Avi Rosenberg, a renal pathologist at Johns Hopkins University in Baltimore, Maryland, one of the most important reasons to have Orthodox doctors advising Orthodox communities was to ensure culturally appropriate guidance was given. When it came to advising camps and schools on how to reopen safely, that knowledge of the Orthodox community was key.

    “There were a lot of nuanced questions that were well beyond the cultural resonance of guidelines from the CDC and local DOH,” Rosenberg said, noting the unique circumstances of how yeshiva students study in pairs, often arguing loudly over a gemara, or the fact that an infection in one large Orthodox family with many children could easily cause closures in multiple schools.

    “I’ve worked with DOH’s around the country at this point and they’ve all been tremendously appreciative to have grassroots physicians involved in designing strategies for environments that they can’t fathom,” Rosenberg said.

    Early on in the pandemic, he started a WhatsApp group for Orthodox doctors in his community in Baltimore that quickly became a place to share information about transmission of the disease in the local community. He also became active in another group — called OrthoDOCS, with more than 150 doctors across the country — where physicians shared information about the disease, how to treat it and what was working to contain the spread in their communities.

    “Why should we all be remaking the wheel every single time?” Rosenberg asked. “I think it’s pretty unique to what we as a community have done and I wouldn’t even know how you would organize this outside of a community setting.”

    But just as in Glatt’s community, Rosenberg, too, started noticing a diminished level of trust in Orthodox doctors among the people he was advising toward the end of the summer. Whereas people who would call him with questions about COVID had previously accepted his advice almost without question, suddenly he was getting pushback from people who were basing their skepticism of medical guidance on unreliable sources or hearsay.

    “There were a lot of nuanced questions that were well beyond the cultural resonance of guidelines from the CDC and local DOH,” said Dr. Avi Rosenberg, a renal pathologist at Johns Hopkins University. Rosenberg advised a number of camps and schools on how to reopen safely during the pandemic.

    To Rosenberg, the breakdown of trust in scientists and doctors came because of the quiet summer when there were few new COVID cases in many Orthodox communities. That lull took place while politicization of the virus in America increased.

    He said the annual period of ritual mourning over the summer called “the three weeks” was the “reset switch” that led to new outbreaks in Orthodox communities up and down the East Coast beginning in mid- to late August. “The amnesia was incredible,” he said.

    “People were starting to celebrate their simchas [celebrations] in full fashion and there were those of us who said it’s a bad idea, and people looked around and said but there’s nothing, look there’s nothing. And as the political tone shifted up in the country, it all coalesced into the situation that we saw,” he said.

    Ditchek noticed the change, too, and attributed it to the evolving medical guidelines as the scientific and medical community’s understanding of COVID developed. Even people who would normally have listened to the doctors’ advice were confused by the frequently changing advice.

    “People misunderstand changes, changes in the direction of the science of COVID, with some kind of scientific error,” Ditchek said. “What we failed to explain as a physician community was that because the scientific discoveries were taking place at such rapid sequence, it was inevitable that we would have to change directions at some point and I think the masks were a perfect example.”

    Now that treatment has improved for COVID patients, the protocols have changed again. Unlike at the beginning of the pandemic when some hospitals were overrun and doctors were ill equipped to treat people for a new disease for which there were few known treatments, doctors are now advising COVID patients to go to the hospital immediately if their situation deteriorates.

    While Ditchek himself was a proponent of keeping people at home earlier in the pandemic when hospitals had fewer therapies to offer — he helped arrange oxygen concentrators for people to use at home so they could avoid going to the hospital for as long as possible — he believes it’s now critical to make sure people know about the new protocol, even if it is confusing and time-consuming.

    “It’s very reflective of what we’ve struggled with, but I’m not embarrassed about having to modify my opinion,” he said. “Because I know it’s going to save lives.”


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    69 Comments
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    H M
    H M
    3 years ago

    “Speakers advocated for hydroxychloroquine, a drug that was used earlier in the pandemic to treat COVID but was later found to be ineffective…”

    This snippet is the key to the entire article. The statement is false. HCQ was never found to be ineffective, it was found to be ineffective when used in ways/circumstances not recommended by anyone. To the contrary, it was and still is very effective (together with zinc) as an early intervention pre-hospitalization, and is used when it can be snuck in under the doctors’ radars.

    This article has an agenda, and its authors have decided for us which medical information is “disinformation”, and which is real. However, intelligent people and medical professionals who rely on statistics rather than political viewpoints can and do disagree. I and everyone else surely do appreciate the efforts of these wonderful doctors (please don’t insult them by calling them Jewish Faucis — Fauci is an undeniable political hack who changed his mind way too often to be reliable) and all the wonderful things they did for us during the early days of the pandemic, when fear and panic reigned supreme. In more recent days, fear and panic have thankfully faded, and people now seek advice from many other professionals as well. The differing opinions should be welcomed and analyzed, not categorically filed under “disinformation”.

    Steve
    Steve
    3 years ago

    This article just shows how even good hearted doctors can be so blind, all of them see that nobody’s trusting them anymore and none of them can figure out the reason? Maybe you have all been proven wrong with your advice? Maybe we see that you all have agendas and we came to distrust you, Especially as this article quotes about hydroxychloroquine that it doesn’t work when so many people saw with their own eyes on their family members that it does work, you are all in the tank with the medical establishment, there’s no study that masks work in keeping of spreading the virus, but there is a study that it doesn’t work.
    Doctors are used that we all follow them blindly and we are all ignorant and have no opinion or should not have an opinion whatsoever, it all changed now and they can’t stand it that we have our own opinion and we don’t follow them blindly we have opened our eyes and we see that they’re not always here for the best treatment for us we saw that in the neglect from doctors and nurses in the hospitals also.
    So please doctors don’t bash us we are entitled of our own opinion no matter how well learned you are we still have an opinion and you should also respect it.

    Stam Misha
    Stam Misha
    3 years ago

    I think this virus has been such a surprise and a test of the limits of modern medical knowledge that fauci and co has flopped a number of times.

    For example, initially they odered no masks to be worn not just for everybody, but even for medical personnel at a time when covoid19 testing was hard to obtain and therefore the covid diagnosis was hard to confirm. This caused medical staff to get infected. Then this decision was quickly reversed and it worked and it was eventually extended for everyone in enclosed areas.

    However, when people see this, that the “experts” do not know and are forced to change their opinions, they stop listening to them. It is implied that anyone with the status of “expert” cannot afford to learn by trial and error.

    Yossie
    Yossie
    3 years ago

    Dr/Rabbi Glatt and others only brings hysteria into the community. They kept people from going to Shul until recently. Comparing to Dr Fauci is not a compliment. In addition, hydroxychloroquine has saved many peoples lives. I personally know three people who took it and did well. You cannot give it when a patient is ICU in an advanced stage. I think that they enjoy the added publicity.

    ruby
    ruby
    3 years ago

    one issue was / is – that as rabbi dr. glatt was issuing press releases i felt they were totaly out of touch with the real facts on the ground.
    as dr. ditchek was asking trump for 10,000 vents – when the boat.. hospital tents lay empty..
    there wasnt ” a lul” it had almost vanished .. and this past month is not “A WAVE” not remotely compared to the spring yet i think what really bothers them is that the frum community as a whole see them as way overkill & out of touch – yet rabbi glatt was sincere
    baltimore always thinks brooklyn is nuts
    most of their prophecies flopped

    Donny
    Donny
    3 years ago

    I am totally in the camp of those that wear masks and take all precautions. Nevertheless, I respect the professional opinion of only some of the aforementioned Doctors. I am sure all are licensed but to me, the medical School, Country of Medical Education, specialty and professional achievements are indications

    i consider. I also consider whether a person has a record of taking money from firms in the vaccine business.

    wandering
    wandering
    3 years ago

    one of the biggest gedolim in america was speaking to talmidim via teleconference after pesach and made mention during his speech that one of the main doctors involved with warning people to shut down minyanim gatherings, was himself on line to “koif pizza motzai pesach” buy pizza motzai pesach! I still never was able to figure out which doctor he was referring to. doctor d was it you?

    Big red
    Big red
    3 years ago

    Of course people are afraid to criticize a doctor by revealing their names. Doctors are as human as all of us snd most have egos all the way to the sky and why would anyone want to be a target by the Dr who may take it out by those that out their names out?

    But yes, the orthodox doctors in orthodox communities got carried away. They are advising rabbis when schools and shuls should be closed. It’s a shame.

    Sam
    Sam
    3 years ago

    Let’s not forget the Hasidic doctors the likes of Dr Jacob Kornblue and professor yossel rapaport who tried with all their might to enlighten their narrow minded brothers. Thru interviews in national newspapers, and media as far as Israel, just so if they could save one life

    Avoid Panicdemics
    Avoid Panicdemics
    3 years ago

    wow . Thank G-d people are waking up and are turning off the voices of doom… There IS hope for humanity!!!!!! Baruch Hashem!!!!!

    E Archy
    E Archy
    3 years ago

    FYI for Stag the lair and mr smart guy. The wave 2 of the epidemic is over in our community. Coumo is just taking revenge,. It was also not the level of serious deathly.

    Hi al
    Hi al
    3 years ago

    All of us would be listening to these Jewish doctors if only they would be honest and save lives through prescribing hydroxy.. Unfortunately they work for big pharma and choose to stay ignorant..

    Jews For Coumo
    Jews For Coumo
    3 years ago

    I’m very jelous of the olam Haba that these people are going to get. They saved more Jewish lives that anybody since the holocaust!

    proud member of the 18%
    proud member of the 18%
    3 years ago

    The disinformation that is discussed in this article comes straight from the president that this paper has endorsed! If there ever was an example why that was a shameful endorsement, this is it!

    E Archy
    E Archy
    3 years ago

    Fauci is very qualified to deal with diseases but is not and should not be the go to man for public policy around the disease. he fails to see the draconian consequences that come from his cure and its side effects. His job isn’t to decide public policy. Sure he handled the aids epdimic but that wasn’t the same kind of public policy he ventured into now. Imagine if he said, during aids, I have a simple cure. All you gays and immoral people just socila distance. Yes the best cure for aids would have simply been to social distance. You can only get aids with social contact. But he never said that. Its nice to distribute and spread healthy vaccines but to suggest social polcies such as the current when you have no social experience on that scale is just wrong. His advice should be a factor but not the decision.
    Re these two doctors, I have lots of respect for Rabbi Dr. Glatt especially when he tried to open camps. It shows he is safe but also not looking to lock us in cages. Dr Ditchek who thinks its his job to video safe social distant outdoor minyan and bashmutz them, well not much better than Kornbluh.