National Post (National Edition)

EARLIER SOCIAL DISTANCING COULD HAVE SAVED LIVES

Trump spokesman rejects findings, points at China

- TEO ARMUS

• On March 8, it was mostly business as usual in United States. As the Lakers faced the Clippers in a much-anticipate­d Los Angeles basketball matchup, Sen. Bernie Sanders rallied before a packed crowd in Michigan. In Miami, thousands squeezed onto the beach for a massive dance party. With 500 coronaviru­s infections reported nationwide at the time, the outbreak seemed like a distant threat to many Americans.

But by the following Sunday, the nation had entered a different universe: 2,000 confirmed cases, dozens of deaths, and shutdown orders in Illinois, Ohio and New York City, among other parts of the country.

What if those sweeping measures imposed by March 15 — a federal warning against large gatherings, health screenings at airports, states of emergency declared by governors and mayors — had been announced a week earlier?

New research from Columbia University epidemiolo­gists offered up one possible answer on Wednesday. If the same kind of social distancing had been in place seven days earlier, their study found, the U.S. could have prevented 36,000 deaths through early May — about 40 per cent of fatalities reported to date.

“If you don’t take steps to fight the growth rate aggressive­ly, you get much worse consequenc­es,” said Jeffrey Shaman, an environmen­tal health sciences professor who led the study.

His team’s analysis used infectious disease modelling to examine the spread of the virus from March 15, when many people nationwide began staying home, until May 3. The researcher­s examined transmissi­ons within each county, movement between counties, and deaths to chart how the virus spread — and killed — over the course of seven weeks.

Then, Shaman and other researcher­s modelled another scenario: What if government officials had closed everything down one week earlier?

Unlike some of the forecasts that have made headlines in recent weeks, their model does not attempt to predict how certain policies — say, another month of shutdowns, or partial reopening measures — might affect the virus’s spread. It simply shifts the timeline for the country’s response.

Move it back even further, and the results are more dramatic. If the United States had mustered the same kind of political and public will against the virus on March 1, the researcher­s found, 54,000 fewer Americans would have lost their lives to the illness. By Thursday, the nationwide death toll had surpassed 92,000.

The Trump administra­tion blasted the study’s findings following a New York Times report late on Wednesday. In a statement to The Post, White House spokesman Judd Deere said that federal officials had made the best decisions possible with the informatio­n available at the time.

“What would have saved lives is if China had been transparen­t and the World Health Organizati­on had fulfilled its mission,” Deere said. “What did save American lives is the bold leadership of President Trump.”

The president had imposed “early travel restrictio­ns when we had no idea the true level of asymptomat­ic spread,” the spokesman said, and organized “the greatest mobilizati­on of the private sector since World War II to deliver critical supplies” and expand testing.

Trump banned travel from Europe on March 13, and told the nation to “take it easy” and “relax” two days later. It was not until the end of the month that he first used the Defense Production Act to compel factories to produce ventilator­s.

Shaman said that the effectiven­ess of the country’s virus response relies on decisions made at all levels, from the Oval Office down to individual households. In Cook County, Ill., which includes Chicago, he said, orders from state and local officials as well as compliance from residents seem to have pushed the rate of infection into a decline.

“You could sit there and point the finger at whoever you wanted to,” Shaman said. “In truth, each of us is going to draw his or her own conclusion­s about where blame may be assigned.”

It is more productive, he said,

WE HAD NO IDEA THE TRUE LEVEL OF ASYMPTOMAT­IC SPREAD.

to take the study’s lessons and apply them to the future, particular­ly as large swaths of the country move to partially reopen ahead of Memorial Day weekend.

With businesses up and running and Americans leaving their houses more regularly, the country must remain vigilant and swing into action quickly when new outbreaks flare up, Shaman added, pointing to the aggressive steps taken by nations like South Korea and New Zealand. That requires strong calls to action, too.

“What we have before us is a very, very challengin­g problem,” he said. “It requires political leadership and public compliance and a will on the part of everybody in society to make it happen.”

 ?? REUTERS/EDUARDO MUNOZ/FILE ?? If a federal warning against large gatherings, health screenings at airports, and states of emergency had been
announced a week earlier in March, a new study shows the U.S. could have prevented 36,000 deaths.
REUTERS/EDUARDO MUNOZ/FILE If a federal warning against large gatherings, health screenings at airports, and states of emergency had been announced a week earlier in March, a new study shows the U.S. could have prevented 36,000 deaths.

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