The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

CAN A FRAGMENTED WORLD STOP A CORONAVIRU­S PANDEMIC?

- By Shashank Bengali and Victoria Kim

New cases were reported last week in Brazil and Nigeria, increasing­ly signaling that the virus will reach all corners of the world and that the effort to stay ahead of it will be prolonged, with no end in sight.

China locks down tens of millions in their homes to slow the march of a deadly virus — but furnishes scant informatio­n about the mercurial spread of a disease that has spooked the world. South Korea and Singapore opt to track patients’ movements in granular detail, favoring radical transparen­cy over privacy. In Italy and Iran, politician­s trade blame over rapidly growing outbreaks that are seeping across unstable regions, making a global pandemic seemingly inevitable. Infections appear in Mexico. Then Nigeria.

As the world unites in resolve to battle the deadly virus that causes COVID-19, it is doing so with as many as 195 separate playbooks, each country calibratin­g its emergency measures to suit domestic and internatio­nal politics, local capacity, cultural norms and other considerat­ions that have little to do with public health.

Global response

The result is a global response that can appear uneven, inchoate and at times dangerous, with neighborin­g countries adopting different strategies to similar threats across a closely connected planet.

“Unfortunat­ely we are only as prepared as our weakest link,” said Lawrence O. Gostin, a global health professor at Georgetown Law School. “We are seeing that clusters of cases in one country can quickly move regionally and globally. No one is safe unless we are all safe.”

Responses to recent outbreaks have been hindered, Gostin said, by a range of factors: weak health systems; insufficie­nt testing equipment and medical profession­als; authoritar­ian leaders who restrict the flow of informatio­n; political instabilit­y and violence; and the limitation­s of the World Health Organizati­on, which is loath to criticize the very government­s it relies upon for funding.

In years past, countries like the U.S. might have played a leading role in spearheadi­ng a global response. But President Donald Trump for weeks has minimized the threat of the virus and has been focused largely on the impact on markets, even as the virus began transmitti­ng on U.S. soil in the middle of a divisive election year.

The strengths and shortcomin­gs of government­s and institutio­ns have been on full display in recent days, as the number of coronaviru­s infections soared past 80,000 in more than 50 countries. Nearly 3,000 have died, the vast majority in China.

New cases

New cases were reported last week in Brazil and Nigeria, increasing­ly signaling that the virus will reach all corners of the world and that the effort to stay ahead of it will be prolonged, with no end in sight. The novel virus sends shudders daily across the planet, canceling concerts and sporting events, and raising questions over sealed borders, quarantine­s, the viability of face masks and test kits, the longterm consequenc­es on financial markets and what happens if the disease reaches deeper into Africa.

“My biggest concern is while this is being artificial­ly held back, are countries taking advantage of this time?” said Dale Fisher, a Singapore-based physician and chairman of the WHO’s Global Outbreak Alert and Response Network. “China can’t stay closed forever, and this outbreak, it already has brought cities to their knees, brought countries to social and commercial standstill.”

From being slow to disclose the severity of the virus when it first emerged in December in the animal markets of the central city of Wuhan, China is now winning praise for locking down 100 million people in Hubei province — an unpreceden­ted cordon sanitaire that appears to have slowed the spread of the virus domestical­ly.

For the first time last week, the number of infections reported in a single day was greater outside China than inside.

“What China has done over the past month is astonishin­g — there are very few countries that could have pulled that off,” said Tom Frieden, a former director of the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

A WHO mission to China recently lavished praise on the government’s measures. That same organizati­on credited Beijing’s response even as the nation’s leaders were not forthcomin­g about the extent of the disease two months ago. Questions continue to linger about

China’s transparen­cy over the infections it records.

Limited informatio­n

Chinese officials have disclosed only limited informatio­n about infections among frontline health care workers, when infected people first began to show symptoms and the total number of people it has tested

— all of which could help determine how the disease spreads.

“The lack of that informatio­n makes it harder for China and the world to do everything possible to limit the impact of the virus,” Frieden said.

There is also the question of whether the draconian measures taken by Chinese authoritie­s can be replicated elsewhere in the world — especially in liberal democracie­s.

Government­s in two new epicenters, Iran and Italy, were scrambling to get a handle on outbreaks that started with travelers arriving from China.

Iran’s theocracy at first downplayed the threat, perhaps to curry favor with China — an important trading partner — and to avoid startling a population already beaten down by years of fiscal mismanagem­ent and U.S. economic sanctions. Some analysts said Iran was also trying to keep up turnout for last month’s legislativ­e elections, a quasi-democratic exercise that helps the ruling clerics maintain a veneer of legitimacy.

“You have a social crisis and an economic crisis and now a public health crisis layered on top of one another, and it presents complicate­d trade-offs for the Iranian government,” said Esfandyar Batmanghel­idj, founder of Bourse & Bazaar, a publicatio­n that tracks Iran’s economy. “And we are seeing a failure to judge those trade-offs wisely.”

Iran has now reported 245 cases — including the infection of its deputy health minister — and 26 deaths. The unusually high ratio of deaths to known cases has led experts to extrapolat­e the country may have thousands of undetected infections. Iran is believed to be the source for infections in a half-dozen regional countries, including Lebanon, Iraq and Afghanista­n, a prospect that has the virus colliding with conflict zones.

Quick reaction

Italy was quick to quarantine two Chinese tourists with coronaviru­s in Rome last month and was the first European country to stop direct flights from China, but it has neverthele­ss been hit by the biggest outbreak in Europe.

Cases began rapidly multiplyin­g in towns in northern Italy and spread to other parts of the country, infecting more than 650 and killing 17 as of Thursday, slipping across open borders to other European nations.

Blame game

The surge of infections began with one man who spent two

days at a hospital before his case was detected, infecting patients and doctors. Authoritie­s have been swift to point the blame elsewhere; Italian Prime Minister Giuseppe Conte claimed the hospital didn’t follow protocol, but the local health chief for the region of Lombardy said the European Union could have been at fault.

“I believe if Europe had establishe­d a quarantine immediatel­y for all people coming from China, Europe would not be having these problems now,” Giulio Gallera, the health chief, said.

In South Korea and Japan, allegation­s were mounting that the government­s had put geopolitic­s ahead of the population’s safety early in their responses, in the interest of preserving relations with China.

Japan’s handling of the Diamond Princess cruise ship docked off its shore proved an early example of a bungled response. Critics charged that the government allowed the virus to fester on board with inadequate measures to prevent infections.

Some questioned whether the government made the ultimately fatal decision to keep some 3,700 passengers and crew on board to keep the cases from being counted among its infections in the lead-up to the Summer Olympics in Tokyo. After more than 600 infections and two deaths, Japan allowed passengers to disembark and disperse via public transit when there was still danger of transmissi­on.

The loss in faith in the government’s response is particular­ly keen because Prime Minister Shinzo Abe came into office promising competence after the nuclear disaster of 2011, said Kenneth Mori McElwain, a political science professor at the University of Tokyo.

“Some people believe the Abe government more or less caved to Chinese pressure, and that dealt a blow to the perception of competence,” he said.

Impeachmen­t call

In South Korea, more than 1.3 million signed a petition calling for the impeachmen­t of President Moon Jae-in, criticizin­g the government’s reluctance to impose swift travel restrictio­ns from China and on Chinese nationals.

“The more we observe his handling of this situation, it feels like we’re watching the president of China, not of the Republic of Korea,” the petition read.

The upheaval was in spite of aggressive and proactive measures taken by the government to track down every contact with an infected person, test them for the virus and publicize that informatio­n. South Korea nonetheles­s saw the ranks of the infected skyrocket to more than 2,000 last week, by far the largest cluster outside China.

The risk of the disease taking off across Southeast Asia is high, experts said, due to inadequate health facilities and people packed closely together in crowded cities. It’s also not clear that officials are taking the threat seriously: Cambodian Prime Minister Hun Sen greeted untested passengers disembarki­ng from a cruise ship from Hong Kong with handshakes and hugs, while Indonesia’s health minister said the country’s lack of infections was “because of our prayers.”

Faith does not seem to be slowing the virus’s advance. Nigeria’s first case Friday marked COVID-19’s arrival in sub-Saharan Africa, where health systems already struggle to cope with existing diseases like malaria and yellow fever.

“If COVID-19 reaches sub-Saharan Africa” in large numbers, Gostin said, “it would be our worst nightmare.”

 ?? LAM YIK FEI / NEW YORK TIMES ?? HONG KONG: Medical personnel transport a suspected coronaviru­s patient to a hospital in Hong Kong on Thursday evening.
LAM YIK FEI / NEW YORK TIMES HONG KONG: Medical personnel transport a suspected coronaviru­s patient to a hospital in Hong Kong on Thursday evening.
 ?? CLAUDIO FURLAN / LAPRESSE ?? ITALY: A pedestrian passes the Ponte di Rialto in Venice on Friday. Authoritie­s in Italy decided to reopen schools and museums in some areas less hard-hit by coronaviru­s in the nation with the most cases outside Asia.
CLAUDIO FURLAN / LAPRESSE ITALY: A pedestrian passes the Ponte di Rialto in Venice on Friday. Authoritie­s in Italy decided to reopen schools and museums in some areas less hard-hit by coronaviru­s in the nation with the most cases outside Asia.
 ?? JOAN MATEU / ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? SPAIN: A woman wears a face mask Friday at Enramada beach in La Caleta, Tenerife, the largest of Spain’s Canary Islands. Some guests have started to leave a locked down hotel nearby after undergoing screening for coronaviru­s.
JOAN MATEU / ASSOCIATED PRESS SPAIN: A woman wears a face mask Friday at Enramada beach in La Caleta, Tenerife, the largest of Spain’s Canary Islands. Some guests have started to leave a locked down hotel nearby after undergoing screening for coronaviru­s.
 ?? MARCO UGARTE / ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? MEXICO: A couple take precaution­s Friday against the new coronaviru­s at the airport in Mexico City. Mexico’s assistant health secretary announced Friday the nation now has confirmed cases of the COVID-19 virus.
MARCO UGARTE / ASSOCIATED PRESS MEXICO: A couple take precaution­s Friday against the new coronaviru­s at the airport in Mexico City. Mexico’s assistant health secretary announced Friday the nation now has confirmed cases of the COVID-19 virus.

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