Cumulative Confirmed COVID-19 Cases

Saturday, March 16, 2024

The Next Pandemic? We're Less Ready NOW!

We're "less ready" NOW  Just look at the immediate negative response to the measles, where so-called doctors like Florida's Ladapo tell kids to go to school sick; where illegal aliens are spreading the disease -- and probably other diseases -- in our country; where vaccination is still a dirty word.  Ignorant people who refuse to trust the science are making all contagious diseases even worse, and if we have an even more deadly pandemic that COVID, all bets are off.

From Axios:  COVID backlash could leave the U.S. less ready for the next pandemic. 

"Four years after COVID-19 emerged, the U.S. in many ways is far less ready for the next major viral threat, despite the pandemic era's significant scientific advances.

"Why it matters: Key weaknesses in the country's COVID response have only become more glaring, including the politicization of public health, an understaffed health care workforce and a growing hostility to science.

"The big picture: Experts say it's a matter of when, not if, the world will face another pandemic, and the next one could make the last look mild.

  • The U.S. was caught flat-footed by the arrival of the coronavirus in early 2020 and was hit much harder than other developed nations.
  • The intense backlash against the muddled U.S. response contributed to eroded trust in public health, setting back preparedness efforts in important areas.
  • In a "big picture" way, the U.S. is "less prepared, because so much of this comes down to political will, public trust — public trust in government institutions, public trust in the media, public trust in one another," said Céline Gounder, a senior fellow at health policy nonprofit KFF.

"Yes, but: The country's early struggles with tracking the virus, testing and supply chains, along with the rapid development of vaccines through Operation Warp Speed, yielded important lessons that ultimately have left the U.S. better off, said former Biden administration COVID response coordinator Ashish Jha.

  • "Right now, if we got a novel agent arriving on our shores tomorrow, we could probably pretty rapidly figure out where is it spreading, where is it not," he said, adding that the inability to track COVID was a major reason for harsher measures like stay-at-home orders.
  • "If you think about medical countermeasures, surveillance, we're clearly in better shape," Jha said.

"The rise of nongovernmental data surveillance efforts also represented a monumental change in how public health data is handled, and the ease of at-home testing enabled people to take charge of their own health, said Jennifer Nuzzo, director of the Pandemic Center at Brown University School of Public Health.

  • "We have seen how individuals can take action to protect ourselves," Nuzzo told Axios. "It's not just a matter of government."

"Still, the public health force is dangerously depleted and burnt out, and growing anti-vaccine sentiment could undercut a key tool for curbing the next pandemic.

"Threat level: Resistance to COVID measures has made it more likely a large segment of the population will ignore public health recommendations.

  • It also spurred GOP-led states to curtail public health authorities in a way that could hamstring future responses.
  • "If you look at some of the revisionist history that's taking hold right now, in a bipartisan way honestly, it seems the new consensus is we did too much to protect the elderly and immunocompromised, and I don't know if we'll have the political will to do that next time around," Gounder said.

"Though the pandemic-weary public has long since moved on from COVID, public health experts worry that the country still hasn't fully grappled with why the U.S. response faltered despite its many advantages — and how to prevent that from happening next time.

  • "There needs to be an accounting, and audit of the response, because some of it is potentially easily fixable," Nuzzo said.

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