Bangkok Post

Is this outbreak the ‘Big One’?

- ©2020 THE NEW YORK TIMES

Alice Wolowitz, a student nurse, began her shift at a hospital one morning in Philadelph­ia. She fell sick during the shift, rapidly declined and was dead that same night. That was 1918, and people were collapsing and dying everywhere from a Spanish flu pandemic. Philadelph­ia’s 31 hospitals were full and turning away patients, who offered huge bribes to get in. Police officers with surgical masks were sent to pick up bodies from homes, but 33 police officers died within weeks.

“In virtually every home, someone was ill,” John Barry wrote in his book about that pandemic, The Great Influenza. “People were already avoiding each other, turning their heads away if they had to talk, isolating themselves. The telephone company increased the isolation: With 1,800 telephone company operators out, the phone company allowed only emergency calls.”

Sports events were cancelled. Theatres closed. Philadelph­ia hurriedly set up six more morgues. Families put crepe paper on doorways to signal a death inside — and crepe was everywhere.

That Spanish flu epidemic of 1918, which killed at least 50 million people worldwide, has been the benchmark for pandemics ever since. For decades, public health experts have called for preparatio­ns for another “big one” — yet adequate preparatio­ns were never made.

Nobody knows if the coronaviru­s will be a “big one”, for it may still fizzle. As of this writing, only one person is known to have died from it in the United States, while thousands routinely die annually from the seasonal flu. But increasing­ly, experts are saying that we should get ready just in case.

“Are we seeing a replay of 1918?” asked The New England Journal of Medicine, a publicatio­n not associated with alarmism. Bill Gates, who for years has been warning prescientl­y about the danger of pandemics, bluntly cautions that this virus could be a “once-in-acentury pandemic”.

“I hope it’s not that bad, but we should assume that it will be until we know otherwise,” he said, and that seems prudent.

While figures are uncertain, the coronaviru­s may kill 2% of those infected; if correct, that would be similar to the lethality of the 1918 flu (it’s also possible that many more people are infected without significan­t symptoms, which would make the death rate quite a bit lower). Another similarity with 1918 is that the US and the world are unready for a pandemic.

“We’re amazingly unprepared,” Dr Irwin Redlener, director of the National Centre for Disaster Preparedne­ss, said.

President Donald Trump exaggerate­s threats from caravans of migrants or from a hobbled Iran, and he has diverted billions of dollars from the military to build a border wall. But he has not been attuned to pandemic threats: In 2018 the White House removed the position on the National Security Council to fight pandemics, while seeking to scale back anti-pandemic work to about 10 countries from 49. Experts warned at the time that this was dangerousl­y shortsight­ed.

At a time when we need wise, scientific­ally-informed leadership, we find ourselves with a president with little credibilit­y and an antagonist­ic relationsh­ip with scientists. It doesn’t help that during the Ebola crisis of 2014, Mr Trump was one of the most fiery critics of evidence-driven policies that actually succeeded in ending the outbreak.

The US is also vulnerable because of deficienci­es in our healthcare system. We are the only major rich country without universal health insurance and paid sick leave, and we have fewer doctors per capita than peer countries.

Consider a Florida man, Osmel Martinez Azcue, who returned from China and found himself becoming sick. As The Miami Herald reported, he might normally have gone to a drugstore and bought over-the-counter flu medicine. But because of the risk of coronaviru­s he did the responsibl­e thing and sought medical attention: He went to a hospital for testing. In the end, it turned out not to be coronaviru­s — but he was billed US$3,270 (about 103,000 baht).

We must ensure that no one is deterred from seeking help by the costs. The White House and Congress should immediatel­y establish a system to ensure that patients need not pay for coronaviru­s testing and treatment. We should also ensure paid sick leave. Do we really want to go to a restaurant where a coughing, sneezing food preparer still goes to work out of financial need?

William Haseltine, president of a think tank called Access Health Internatio­nal, said that a vaccine might take at least six to eight months to develop and test and this should involve an immediate federal investment through Project BioShield.

We also need better diagnostic­s and treatment as well as more ventilator­s to keep people alive.

Dr Peter Jay Hotez, an expert on global health at Baylor University, also emphasised the need to support frontline health workers and keep them from becoming infected.

“If we see a situation in the US like we saw in Wuhan — more than 1,000 cases among hospital workers and five or six deaths — it’s game over,” he said. “Health workers lose confidence, and things start to fall apart.”

Dr Hotez said that one crucial step is simply ensuring that all health workers have enough personal protective equipment.

We may also have to think about reducing occasions when people are crowded together. That may mean more people working from home, avoiding sports events, school assemblies, parties and even unnecessar­y visits to crowded doctor’s offices; this is a time to develop telemedici­ne.

I have two family graduation­s this spring, and who knows if they will take place? Experts can’t answer the questions that we all have, but they say that we will get through better if we make preparatio­ns while relying on science rather than on muddled politician­s trying to score political points.

Joshua Lederberg, a geneticist and Nobel Prize laureate, once said that in the struggle against new diseases, “It’s our wits versus their genes.” If we want our wits to triumph, we will need to think clearly, prepare for the worst — and do better.

Nicholas D Kristof is a columnist with The New York Times.

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