The Morning Call

US needs 9/11 Commission for COVID-19

- By F.D. Flam F.D. Flam is a Bloomberg Opinion columnist covering science. She is host of the “Follow the Science” podcast.

During the third week of March 2020, with little public debate and less warning, Americans were told to stay in their homes indefinite­ly as COVID-19 cases climbed. There were only a few days between bland reassuranc­es and lockdown orders — just enough time to go panic shopping for toilet paper.

The first pandemic year represents a crisis distinct from the period after vaccines became widely available. Congress should establish something like the 9/11 Commission — independen­t and bipartisan — to reexamine why our early response was so disruptive and yet so ineffectiv­e. A report issued in time for next year’s anniversar­y of the start of the pandemic might identify weaknesses in the country’s general inability to deal with the next crisis, whatever that entails.

Such a commission should first address why our elected leaders and expert agencies didn’t warn the public sooner. There was strong evidence by early February 2020 that this disease had already spread far beyond Wuhan, China, that it could travel invisibly through mild cases, and that the oldest people were at highest risk.

Some fair warning could have helped people take voluntary measures to avoid infection and prepare for disruption. But for much of January and February we got false reassuranc­e. Even when Nancy Messonnier of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention said on Feb. 25 that the virus might cause “severe” disruption, CDC Deputy Director Anne Schuchat pushed back, saying “our efforts at containmen­t have worked.” It wasn’t until mid-March that the White House declared COVID-19 a national emergency.

The delays in issuing clear warnings were part of a perverse disregard for the effects of time in a crisis. When protective measures began mattered. So did the timing of lifting or changing those measures. People can better stick with sacrifices that have a specific duration and a realistic goal.

Waiting to issue warnings and directives until after the disease was widespread meant more deaths — and the need for more extreme measures to get the same level of mitigation. And it isn’t hindsight bias to say that extreme measures such as shutting schools, businesses and public events would have been less harmful if done for two or three weeks rather than months.

The scenes of people dying in hospital corridors in Italy made it seem necessary to take drastic measures in the U.S. to “flatten the curve” of infection, but there was no scientific case for trying to eradicate an already widespread virus by keeping extreme measures in place long term.

A COVID-19 commission could also look at what government, employers and communitie­s might have done to prevent deaths among essential workers and their families. While Americans saw limited improvemen­ts in paid sick leave policy, the situation called for more. Essential workers who were at risk or lived with people in fragile health should have been able to opt out of work — their jobs taken over temporaril­y by the many healthy, younger Americans who were unafraid and whose mental health might have improved with the chance to contribute rather than stay cooped up alone.

And a special investigat­ion could also help puncture the thin excuse that U.S. leaders made bad decisions because of a lack of data on a novel virus. Even in those early days of 2020, we had enough informatio­n to act more rationally. By early April, there was already growing evidence that the virus was spreading primarily indoors through airborne transmissi­on and there was very little risk outdoors.

Blunt closures of businesses, schools, beaches and parks threw that knowledge out the window — and they didn’t represent scientific consensus. Michael Osterholm, director of the Center for Infectious Disease Research and Policy in Minnesota, co-wrote a Washington Post op-ed published on March 21, 2020, warning that indefinite, sweeping lockdowns were not the best course of action for saving lives: “The best alternativ­e will probably entail letting those at low risk for serious disease continue to work, keep business and manufactur­ing operating, and ‘run’ society, while at the same time advising higher-risk individual­s to protect themselves through physical distancing and ramping up our health-care capacity as aggressive­ly as possible.”

Osterholm stood by this view when I spoke to him this month. (And to give credit where it’s due, he was the first to get me thinking about a 9/11 Commission for COVID-19.)

Lockdowns caused homes to become more crowded — with college students moving in with families, school-age kids at home and others spending much more time in their houses or apartments. Epidemiolo­gists have confirmed that hours of household exposure caused many more cases than exposures of less than 30 minutes. Again, time matters.

A COVID-19 commission should also measure the lasting impact of these early fumbles. After vaccines were introduced, the U.S. started to see many more deaths than other comparably wealthy countries. We had lower vaccine uptake in part because the public health community had lost the people’s trust during that first year.

The justificat­ion for blunt, long-term restrictio­ns was the assumption that more people would die as a result of more targeted measures. But that needs close examinatio­n — it’s also possible that those policies made the situation here much worse and deadlier than it had to be.

Lots of countries made mistakes as COVID-19 spread around the world. The only way to learn from them is to give them a hard, nonpartisa­n look.

 ?? MARCIO JOSE SANCHEZ/AP ?? Demonstrat­ors hold signs as they protest the lockdown and wearing masks in June 2020 in Huntington Beach, California.
MARCIO JOSE SANCHEZ/AP Demonstrat­ors hold signs as they protest the lockdown and wearing masks in June 2020 in Huntington Beach, California.

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