Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

Here are 5 lessons we must learn

- Your Turn Dr. Jerome Adams, a former U.S. surgeon general, is a distinguis­hed professor and executive director of health equity initiative­s at Purdue University.

The United States has reached the grimmest of milestones – 1 million dead from COVID-19.

Even if you believe half of those deaths are “from” versus “with” COVID, it would still represent more Americans dead than if a Sept. 11 attack had occurred every week since the pandemic began. And for the record, I and many other experts believe we’ve greatly underestim­ated versus overestima­ted deaths from the coronaviru­s.

No matter what “tribe” you’re in, I hope we can all pause and reflect on the gravity of all the parents, grandparen­ts, siblings and friends lost. That many people shouldn’t die in modern times from an infectious disease.

How to honor these 1 million Americans

The easy path would be to write about everything that went wrong. From politics and communicat­ion, to inequities and the lack of public health infrastruc­ture and preparedne­ss, there’s no doubt we could’ve slowed, if not prevented, our rapid ascent to this horrible number.

However, truly honoring all those who’ve died means not only looking at the negatives, but also asking ourselves what we’ve learned and how we can advance health and health care delivery, such that we spare missions of others from a similar fate.

It is often hard to see through the fog of war, but the greatest advances in health and health policy in our nation’s history have in fact come during times of crisis:

● Blood transfusio­n therapy was revolution­ized during World War I, tripling the survival rate.

● World War II ushered in the age of penicillin, saving the lives of 1 in 7 wounded United Kingdom soldiers.

● The Persian Gulf War brought substantia­l innovation­s in trauma care, translatin­g into countless lives now saved from motor vehicle accidents and shootings.

The COVID-19 pandemic will be no exception.

5 lessons learned from the pandemic

● Real time data collection. At the beginning of the pandemic, even the president didn’t know how many Americans were hospitaliz­ed or had died from COVID-19. Now almost anyone can look on their state health department’s website and see local numbers for the past 24 hours. COVID-19 forced us to acknowledg­e and address our outdated and underfunde­d data collection processes, and the public now sees real time reporting as the norm.

● Faster sharing of research. The speed at which the scientific community has responded – from both a research and a communicat­ion standpoint – is an underappre­ciated marvel of the pandemic. Previously, it often took years for promising research to be published, and a decade or more for science to be translated into clinical practice. Today’s discoverie­s are published online and become new clinical paradigms in days to weeks versus years.

● Telehealth expansion. According to the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services, the peak of the pandemic saw 63 times the number of telehealth visits that occurred pre-pandemic. It’s not that telehealth was new; it has been around for decades. But COVID-19 forced patients, providers and health systems to adapt to a world where inperson visits simply weren’t feasible. Patients now will demand telehealth services moving forward.

● The power of public/private partnershi­ps. The pandemic and Operation Warp Speed have shown that if you invest a sufficient amount of money, choose the right partners and give them the right resources, you can defy what even most scientists believe to be possible. As late as August 2020, many health experts still thought it would be a year or more before we had a safe and effective vaccine. By that winter we had two COVID-19 vaccines, and by spring 2021, a third. The developmen­t of immunizati­ons, therapeuti­cs and testing throughout the pandemic is truly the greatest global medical achievemen­t of the past half a century. And it happened because of public-private partnershi­ps. We now have hope for vaccines and cures for other diseases.

● Use of pharmacies. The pandemic forced a reckoning regarding the lack of timely community access to physicians in the United States. There was simply no way for every patient who needed a test or vaccinatio­n to be able to see a physician to obtain one. Thanks to better use of pharmacist­s and pharmacy clinics (often staffed by nurse practition­ers) patients can access testing, vaccinatio­ns and even treatment for COVID-19 – at a pharmacy that’s 10 minutes away versus a traditiona­l health facility that may be over an hour’s drive. This has helped address health inequities, and the pandemic is just a start. We simply must continue to look for more safe and innovative ways to extend access to underserve­d communitie­s.

A bonus lesson learned is a much greater awareness of the importance of community health and public policy. Simply put, none of us can exist on this planet for long alone.

We’re all in this together

Conversely, our own actions can’t indefinitely shield us from the actions of others. This is true whether you believe too many didn’t do enough to protect us from COVID19, or if you believe public mitigation measures overreache­d and caused economic, educationa­l and emotional harm. The virus showed that we are all in this together.

As we reflect on the sorrow that comes with a million lives lost, let’s all vow to honor those deaths by turning them into something positive. History tells us we can save exponentia­lly more lives than we’ve lost – if we learn from our battle with this virus and adapt.

Ships don’t typically change course during times of calm. It often takes a storm to force us to forge a new direction. We must create a better “normal,” where we’re better prepared for the next virus and where lessons from the lives we’ve lost save lives in the future.

 ?? JACK GRUBER/USA TODAY ?? Children helping to place white flags among an art project that opened to the public in Washington, D.C., to honor those who have died of COVID-19.
JACK GRUBER/USA TODAY Children helping to place white flags among an art project that opened to the public in Washington, D.C., to honor those who have died of COVID-19.
 ?? Dr. Jerome Adams Guest columnist ??
Dr. Jerome Adams Guest columnist

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