China Daily (Hong Kong)

US still unable to get a grip on pandemic

-

It has been confirmed that US Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin has COVID-19. His symptoms are said to be “mild” and he will quarantine at home for the next five days, according to a statement the Defense Department published on Sunday.

The Omicron variant of the novel coronaviru­s is driving a surge in the number of cases across the United States. As of early this week, the cumulative number of infections had hit more than 56 million, among whom 827,700 people had died of the disease.

Although the Joe Biden administra­tion claims it has done all it can to tame the virus, the effects have proved to be limited, and its pandemic prevention and control strategies face multiple challenges.

In the first place, some executive orders on the pandemic prevention and control the previous Donald Trump administra­tion signed remain effective, even if some of them contradict with policies the Biden administra­tion makes. As the Trump administra­tion designated many industries, such as meat processing, as essential infrastruc­ture that are not expected to suspend their operations even if the federal government decrees industries to do so to fight the virus.

Also the Biden administra­tion’s pandemic prevention and control policies are only tight on paper, and they are poorly implemente­d in practice. The US government has shortened the quarantine period of asymptomat­ic cases to only five days, and ignored infectious disease specialist­s’ suggestion that it should be made compulsory that those people should continue to wear face masks and receive nucleic acid tests after finishing their five days of quarantine.

The implementa­tion of testing, vaccinatio­n and pandemic protocol in the US all lag behind the requiremen­ts of the situation. That was the case during the Trump administra­tion, and the Biden administra­tion has not changed that.

The infighting between Republican­s and Democrats has seriously affected the implementa­tion of the Biden administra­tion’s pandemic prevention and control policies. Some public health measures the Biden administra­tion proposed have not gained the support of the Republican­s, making it difficult to obtain funding approval from Congress to put the measures into practice.

The Biden administra­tion’s mandate that businesses with more than 100 employees be vaccinated has faced stiff resistance in many Republican-run states and localities. Republican­s have argued that the Biden administra­tion did not have the authority to bypass Congress to issue such an order.

In the field of epidemic control and public health governance, the boundary of responsibi­lity and obligation between the federal government and local government­s is blurred. Some seemingly sensible federal measures, such as social distancing, mask wearing, testing and temporary lockdowns of public places, have been interprete­d in many quarters as an infringeme­nt of states’ rights.

If the political dilemma cannot be addressed, with about 1 million new cases appearing in the country on Monday, the worst days of the US in the pandemic are yet to come.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from China