Los Angeles Times (Sunday)

WHEN COVID GOT REAL

- By Deborah Netburn

In the last week of February, when I was still hugging friends and sharing appetizers with them over dinner, I received an unwelcome call from my editor.

After weeks of reading my colleagues’ coverage of the novel coronaviru­s that had sent China into an unpreceden­ted lockdown, it was my turn to pitch in.

My assignment: Describe how daily life would change if a fullblown pandemic occurred on American soil.

I thought it was a terrible idea — speculativ­e and sure to needlessly scare readers with tales of shuttered restaurant­s, abandoned playground­s and closed schools. Surely, this was more science fiction than a reported story.

At the time, just 60 coronaviru­s infections had been confirmed in the United States, a country of 331 million people. Was it really necessary to paint a dystopian picture of some imaginary future that would never come to pass? Then I started reporting. I began by listening to a news conference with Dr. Nancy Messonnier, director of the National Center for Immunizati­on and Respirator­y Diseases at the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

I expected a reassuring message that what was happening in China — pop-up hospital wards and healthcare workers suffering from physical and mental exhaustion — would not occur in the

United States. Naive and ignorant, I believed that full-blown pandemics were something that only happened in distant lands and the movies, not here.

Speaking calmly but quickly, Messonnier put the first cracks into my sense of security. She said it was no longer a question of if the virus would spread across the U.S., but rather when, and how many people in the country would experience severe illness.

She described telling her children about the profound disrup

tions they were likely to experience as 2020 unfolded, and calling her school superinten­dent to ask what plans were in place for distance learning.

“You should think about what you would do for child care if schools or day cares close,” she told reporters. “Is teleworkin­g an option for you? Questions like these can help you be better prepared for what might happen.”

I struggled to make sense of what I was hearing. Isn’t it the CDC’s job to keep people from

freaking out? Why was she telling everyone to worry?

The media mantra at the time was that the United States would never resort to the “draconian” restrictio­ns that China imposed. We live in a radically different society with a different government structure. But if we did go into lockdown, what would it look like?

I found a more likely model in Italy, which was just on the cusp of its own devastatin­g outbreak. I clicked over and over through photo galleries depicting life in the country’s Lombardy region, where 10 towns had just entered lockdown after a cluster of cases suddenly emerged in Codogno, southeast of Milan. I saw surreal images of teenagers gathered in a park in a semicircle wearing masks and standing six feet apart, an elementary school teacher trying to engage young children over the computer, a family that had not left their apartment in a week.

Media outlets reported that officials in Milan had closed museums and schools, bars and nightclubs. Cathedrals too. Supermarke­ts were running out of fruit, vegetables, meat and nearly all canned foods.

By now, the dystopian future my editor had asked me to describe no longer felt like science fiction. Instead, it felt like I was looking into a crystal ball, gazing at what would inevitably come our way.

I called my sister, a pediatrici­an in New York who never worries about anything. “I’m starting to freak out,” I said.

“I know, me too,” she said. That sealed it.

In that call with reporters, Messonnier left the door open for an alternativ­e reality — one in which the overwhelmi­ng and scary process of planning for a pandemic might not be necessary.

“I continue to hope that in the end we will look back and feel like we were overprepar­ed,” she said.

It was a future I wanted to believe in when she said it, but no longer could.

PROTECTIVE SHIELDS and desks spaced well apart were part of the protocol for in-person instructio­n at St. Maria Goretti Catholic School in Long Beach in October.

 ?? Christina House Los Angeles Times ?? NEWLYWEDS Kathleen and Russel Sion pose at the Carson school where they met as children. They were married in April in the parking lot of Anaheim’s Honda Center — via walkie-talkie.
Christina House Los Angeles Times NEWLYWEDS Kathleen and Russel Sion pose at the Carson school where they met as children. They were married in April in the parking lot of Anaheim’s Honda Center — via walkie-talkie.
 ??  ?? CLOSED BEACHES and parks were the norm for parts of the year in Southern California, including this vast deserted stretch as seen from Hermosa Beach in March.
CLOSED BEACHES and parks were the norm for parts of the year in Southern California, including this vast deserted stretch as seen from Hermosa Beach in March.
 ?? Jay L. Clendenin Los Angeles Times ?? PVC PIPING and shower curtains helped Peet Sapsin, center, keep his Redondo Beach fitness center open by keeping his students distanced and relatively protected.
Jay L. Clendenin Los Angeles Times PVC PIPING and shower curtains helped Peet Sapsin, center, keep his Redondo Beach fitness center open by keeping his students distanced and relatively protected.
 ?? Mel Melcon Los Angeles Times ?? DURING THE EARLY days of the pandemic in March, shoppers waited — some masked, some not — in a line that wrapped around the block to enter a Costco in Woodland Hills.
Mel Melcon Los Angeles Times DURING THE EARLY days of the pandemic in March, shoppers waited — some masked, some not — in a line that wrapped around the block to enter a Costco in Woodland Hills.
 ?? Mel Melcon Los Angeles Times ?? FARO TABAJA gives a haircut to Gene Geiser in the doorway of his Manhattan Beach barbershop in July under a COVID-19 requiremen­t that allowed some businesses to reopen.
Mel Melcon Los Angeles Times FARO TABAJA gives a haircut to Gene Geiser in the doorway of his Manhattan Beach barbershop in July under a COVID-19 requiremen­t that allowed some businesses to reopen.
 ?? Robert Gauthier Los Angeles Times ??
Robert Gauthier Los Angeles Times

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States