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The coronavirus, also known as COVID-19, is spreading rapidly outside of China. The World Health Organization has confirmed 833 cases in South Korea, 144 cases in Japan, and 124 cases in Italy. In response, Italy "locked down 50,000 people in 10 northern towns to contain the first major coronavirus outbreak in Europe." Iranian authorities "have ordered the closure of schools, universities and other educational centers in 14 provinces."
Overall, the number of new coronavirus cases outside of China has doubled every 5.5 days since late January. The surge of new cases in South Korea, Italy, and Japan fit into this pattern.
Globally, according to the WHO, there have been 79,407 confirmed cases of COVID-19 and 2,622 deaths. The overwhelming number of cases are within China, concentrated in the Hubei province. But there are now confirmed cases in 32 countries.
The window for containing the epidemic is running out, according to experts. We are on the brink of a global pandemic.
In the United States, the Center for Disease Control (CDC) reports there are now 53 confirmed cases, up from 34 last week. All of the confirmed cases inside the United States have involved people who traveled to Asia. The CDC recommends avoiding non-essential travel to China. Older adults and people with chronic medical conditions are advised to avoid traveling to Japan and South Korea.
The spread of the virus is a threat to people's lives and the global economy. Stock markets in the United States and around the world were down sharply on Monday on fears that the spread of the coronavirus could create a global economic slowdown. Chinese factories are an essential component of the global supply chain for many products, including cars, cell phones, and clothing.
Is the United States prepared to deal with this growing threat? Who is in charge of the domestic response? Right now, there are more questions than answers.
Tearing down America's pandemic response infrastructure
In 2018, the Trump administration ousted Rear Adm. Tim Ziemer, who served as the Senior Director of Global Health Security. Ziemer was a member of the National Security Council, where he was responsible for coordinating "responses to global health emergencies and potential pandemics." Ziemer was lauded as "one of the most quietly effective leaders in public health." His work on Malaria during the Obama administration helped save 6 million lives.
"Admiral Ziemer’s departure is deeply alarming," Congressman Ami Bera (D-CA) said in May 2018. "Expertise like his is critical in avoiding large outbreaks." Beth Cameron, who served on the National Security Council in the Obama administration, said that Ziemer's ouster was “a major loss for health security, biodefense, and pandemic preparedness” and noted that it "is unclear in his absence who at the White House would be in charge of a pandemic."
John Bolton, who was serving as Trump's National Security Adviser at the time, did not just remove Ziemer. He decided to eliminate the position, and "the NSC’s entire global health security unit." Bolton also forced out Tom Bossert, a highly regarded expert who was Ziemer's counterpart at the Department of Homeland Security. "Neither the NSC nor DHS epidemic teams have been replaced," Foreign Policy reported in January.
Trump slashed funding for the CDC's epidemic prevention activities, forcing the agency to end its work "in 39 out of 49 countries because money is running out" in 2018. The program, which started in 2014, was designed to "help countries prevent infectious-disease threats from becoming epidemics." Among the countries no longer included: China.
Trump has also tried to decimate funding for the U.S. Public Health Service Commissioned Corps, which is tasked with fighting the spread of disease. Congress, however, has refused to comply. So the Trump administration has simply let the group slowly atrophy, failing to replace members who quit or retire.
Who is in charge?
Who is in charge of the United States' response to the coronavirus? You might assume it is the CDC. You would be wrong.
There were several hundred Americans aboard a cruise ship, the Diamond Princess, that experienced an outbreak of COVID-19 near Japan. The Americans were evacuated and, before they were flown home, 14 tested positive for the coronavirus. The CDC advised that these infected passengers should not be flown home with the rest of the group, arguing that they could infect the others.
The CDC, however, was overruled by the "State Department and a top Trump administration health official." The decision was made even though to government "had already told passengers they would not be evacuated with anyone who was infected or who showed symptoms." CDC officials were so distraught that they "demanded to be left out of the news release that explained that infected people were being flown back to the United States."
At the moment, there is no "clear chain of command for pandemic response."
Flunking the test
The number of confirmed COVID-19 cases in the United States, so far, is relatively low. But there are also serious problems with the system set up to identify new outbreaks.
The test developed by the CDC to detect the coronavirus has not been able to be verified as accurate by most labs. As a result, just "three of the more than 100 public health labs across the country have verified the CDC test for use." This has "hampered CDC’s plan to screen samples collected by its national flu-surveillance network for the coronavirus." These issues "could impede the U.S. government’s ability to detect scattered cases before they snowball into larger outbreaks."
The CDC is now reformulating the test. The FDA, however, "would have to authorize any changes to the coronavirus test before the CDC could distribute a new one."
Politics over science
Inside the White House, the concern has been around how the coronavirus could impact Trump's reelection. Senior officials fear "a sustained outbreak could slow global markets and upend a strong U.S. economy that has been central to Trump’s political pitch."
Trump has been eager to downplay the threat of the coronavirus in public, recently expressing confidence that the virus would dissipate in a few weeks when the weather gets warmer.
Now, the virus that we’re talking about having to do — you know, a lot of people think that goes away in April with the heat — as the heat comes in. Typically, that will go away in April. We’re in great shape though. We have 12 cases — 11 cases, and many of them are in good shape now.
There is no scientific basis for Trump's claim, which is based on the assumption that the coronavirus will follow the same pattern as the seasonal flu. Columbia University epidemiologist Stephen Morse called Trump's comments "wishful thinking" and warned against being "lulled by hopeful, but quite possibly wrong analogies."
Trump's willingness to disregard science when it suits him is dangerous. Containing the coronavirus requires the government to base its policies on science and provide the public with accurate information. It also requires the public to trust the information it is receiving from government officials.
Trump, however, has spent three years undermining trust in all institutions. The result is an information environment that makes it more difficult to contain a potential outbreak.
Thanks for reading!
Every choice that Trump or his select group of admin toadies makes is always the wrong one.
Always.
John Bolton was a disaster in the making and had done nothing to dispell my thoughts on this before, during or after his tenure as a member of the Trump team. Spineless.
Many medical pundits have spouted worry more about the flu. I get where they are coming from. But there is a shot. Treatment protocols.
Right now containment of coronvirus and isolation prevents it's spread. That is not a treatment. Watching motorcycles sanitizing S. Korean Streets made me wonder if that could work in America. Not. I just can't see people here staying home and in. Too many cowboys on the range in the US.
Trump and the GOP continue to undermine on every possible level. The CDC must be listened to about how to handle this. Yet he comes up with a stupidly spoken analogy and MSM prints it and off to the next chaos. Labradoodles.
One of my elementary teachers nursed people during the great flu epidemic in about 1918.
She told us they stacked the bodies like cords of wood in the streets where she lived in SWVA.
The CDC has fought for years to stop pandemics of that sort. One greedy imbecile and his party of greed could indeed resurface such a problem if not coronavirus, the next.
Big business and 1% tax cuts, military spending and the Space Force and a wall taking up money instead of funding needed programs for the people.
Hard to comprehend our nation in 2020. Scary. Scary. Scary.
As I read yet another disastrous "destroy the government" move by Trump and the Party of Greed, I can't help but think about the conversation I've been having with Never Trumper Republican friends, many of them doctors. They despise what Trump has done to this country, but they consider Bernie Sanders to be "one step too far." Better to leave a sociopath and his sycophants in office.
I've sent them this column and resisted the urge to add a snide comment—this emergency and out lack of preparedness is just too important to treat as just another political football. But my colleagues in the media bear a big part of the responsibility. Perhaps the worst aspect the daily Trump freak show is how many important stories like this that are going uncovered by the media who can't pull itself away from the shiny object Trump's throws out there every day, whether's it's an obnoxious tweet or another outrageous statement on the South Lawn. Think the moderators at tonight's debate will ask what happened to the people in our government tasked with responding to this kind of emergency?