Los Angeles Times

Pandemic laxity

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Re “Virus cases at LAX weren’t followed up on,” June 14

The total miscoordin­ation of the identifica­tion, testing and isolation of passengers exposed to COVID-19 on two flights into Los Angeles Internatio­nal Airport in March is truly only the tip of the iceberg.

This is exemplary of how human beings respond to a threat when there has been no prior thought, planning or policy. We have all been watching as the federal government has shrunk from its duty to protect its citizens.

The virus knows no borders, and to abrogate the responsibi­lity to individual states to coordinate complex medical, logistical and social action is deplorable. Going forward, we need a national strategy designed by the best and brightest minds, and we need a pandemic czar to lead with full accountabi­lity.

Please vote this November. Tony Haftel, MD

Palm Desert

This former major airline spokespers­on who handled the airline’s SARS communicat­ions during the 2003 crisis learned several things during that time that remain especially true during this pandemic.

One of the most important is the idea that no matter how clean the plane may be, no matter how completely masked and gloved the crew may be, if infected people are allowed on board, viruses probably will have their way.

Before I worked for an airline, I was a spokespers­on for the University of Minnesota’s medical center. There, several infection control researcher­s said that if a pandemic resembling the 1918 influenza ever hit, then timely and correct communicat­ions to and from public health authoritie­s would be as important as dramatic preventive measures.

Guess it’s true that those who do not learn from the past may be condemned to repeat it. Mary Stanik

Tucson ::

That people aboard two flights into LAX in March were not told that fellow passengers were later found to have been infected with COVID-19 highlights why we are now averaging more than 3,000 new confirmed COVID-19 cases per day in California.

The state’s antiquated manual track-and-trace methods were totally inadequate when we had 250 cases, and there is no way they can effectivel­y trace the contacts of the current 150,000-plus cases, or even a fraction of the increasing daily new cases.

The state needs to use technology to set up an automated track-andtrace system like what was used very effectivel­y to virtually wipe out cases in South Korea. The COVIDsafe app has been downloaded by more than onethird of the population in Australia, which has managed to get its average of new confirmed cases per day to around 10.

If we keep doing what we are doing, which is having no effect on reducing the number of new cases in California, many thousands of California­ns will die, and many more will suffer debilitati­ng effects of the disease for the rest of their lives. Walter Flicker

Escondido

 ?? Lynne Sladky Associated Press ?? A MAN who f lew to LAX on American Airlines was found to have been infected with COVID-19.
Lynne Sladky Associated Press A MAN who f lew to LAX on American Airlines was found to have been infected with COVID-19.

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