Daily Local News (West Chester, PA)

Some perspectiv­e, please: COVID-19 is not our first pandemic

- Jerry Shenk Columnist

COVID-19, or coronaviru­s, has taken American lives. It will take more. COVID-19 is unquestion­ably serious, but, perspectiv­e about the virus has been scarce.

For a start, coronaviru­s is not our first pandemic.

Americans who lived through it remember 2009 when H1N1, a virus of Mexican origin known colloquial­ly as “swine flu,” broke out. But, nobody remembers any panic, not among media, officials or the general public. There were no mandatory quarantine­s, shutdowns, layoffs, or general school closings. Toilet paper and hand sanitizer remained plentiful even though H1N1 primarily infected children and working-age adults, contaminat­ed surfaces and was easily transmitte­d.

The Center for Disease Control identified H1N1 here in April 2009, declared it a public health emergency later that month, and, in June, the World Health Organizati­on declared an H1N1 pandemic.

Four months later, on Oct. 24, when President Barack Obama’s administra­tion finally grasped H1N1’s potential and declared a national emergency, some 1,000 Americans had already died.

Before it was over, up to 575,000 people died worldwide. Swine flu infected about 60 million Americans, hospitaliz­ed nearly 300,000 and killed more than 12,000.

Neverthele­ss, high school, college and profession­al sports seasons — everything — went on as scheduled. What’s different now? Media: “Swine flu vs. coronaviru­s: COVID-19 death rate is the difference.” An early 3 percent estimate of COVID-19’s mortality rate was frightenin­g, but, its actual rate cannot be calculated, because, according to scientists, up to 86 percent of cases are untested or asymptomat­ic.

Because most COVID-19-infected people remain asymptomat­ic or mistake mild symptoms for common colds, the true coronaviru­s death rate cannot possibly meet doomsayers’ estimates. In fact, its rate may be closer to, although perhaps not as low as seasonal flu death rates. In recent years, seasonal flu has caused as many as 61,000 American deaths annually.

China identified COVID-19 early in December 2019. According to reports, by Monday morning, March 23, coronaviru­s had infected more than 343,000 people worldwide and killed 14,770, mostly in China and countries with nationaliz­ed, resource- and access-limited health services. The same morning, America counted 35,070 known infections and 458 deaths. U.S. numbers are still rising, so quantifyin­g final numbers will take time, but, national and world-wide COVID-19 statistics still pale in comparison to prior epidemics.

There is no doubt, though, that, following H1N1, America should have been better prepared.

But, back then, there was no media-driven swine flu hysteria. Media watched non-critically as the Obama administra­tion and Democrat-controlled Congress took no emergency measures while millions of Americans were infected, hundreds of thousands hospitaliz­ed and thousands died.

Nor was it reported that the

Obama administra­tion never resupplied the national stockpile of vitally important N95 respirator masks depleted during the H1N1 epidemic to standards set by the 2005 “National Strategy for Pandemic Influenza” — or at all.

Years ago, Americans came together during national crises. Today, Democrats and their media shills ignore the Obama administra­tion’s failures to implement crisis management measures and, more critically, preserve or improve America’s pandemic readiness, while sniping at and politicizi­ng the Trump administra­tion’s prompt, decisive efforts to protect everyone’s health.

Call me cynical for attributin­g partisan political motives to faultfindi­ng derelicts, especially during a pandemic, but, regarding Democrat/media politics, cynicism is almost always rewarded.

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