USA TODAY US Edition

Lock down America for five weeks. Now.

Avoid the staggering human and economic costs of coronaviru­s

- Yaneer Bar-Yam

I am an MIT-trained physicist and complexity scientist who studies pandemics. I have warned about global pandemics due to increasing travel for 15 years. I recommende­d communityb­ased monitoring of symptoms to stop Ebola in West Africa in 2014, and it worked. The fastest and even the only way to contain COVID-19 in the United States is a five-week national lockdown.

Closing schools, bars and movie theaters are good measures, but not enough. Our relaxed approach to social distancing is insufficie­nt to stop the exponentia­l growth of COVID-19. Until Americans consistent­ly adopt strong social distancing recommenda­tions — a lockdown — the disease will continue to spread exponentia­lly.

During a five-week national lockdown, federal, state and local authoritie­s would ensure that all Americans stay home except to obtain food and other essentials, access medical care or do work essential to the functionin­g of society. Travel would cease: We would close our borders and airports and prohibit all unnecessar­y travel across state and county (or town) lines within the United States. The U.S. government would have to provide aid to citizens separated from their sources of income and ensure care for vulnerable members of society.

During the first two weeks of a lockdown, infected individual­s will either recover from mild cases of COVID-19 at home or seek medical attention for the 14% of cases that are severe.

During the third, fourth and fifth weeks, any newly infected family or cohabitant­s of infected individual­s will recover or seek medical attention, and their isolation will prevent further spreading. By the end of the lockdown, the number of infections will be a small fraction of what they are now.

Increase testing, cut infections

The lockdown will give us time to dramatical­ly scale up our supply of COVID-19 test kits and capacity to process them. If we reduce the number of infections using the lockdown and start a massive testing regime in the United States, we can control COVID-19 after five weeks without such extreme social distancing measures. Isolating sick individual­s and their immediate contacts will be enough.

The human and economic costs of delaying this lockdown will be staggering. The COVID-19 outbreak has many more cases now than are visible (tip of the iceberg) and they are growing rapidly. We had about 33,500 cases in the United States on Sunday, over 9,000 more cases than the previous day.

At this rate, without a lockdown, in one week there will be about 300,000.

In two weeks: 3 million.

One in 7 cases requires hospitaliz­ation, and 5% require intensive care with ventilator­s to survive. There aren’t nearly enough ventilator­s available.

The effectiven­ess of a five-week lockdown will be dramatic — and also entirely predictabl­e.

Act now to save millions

We know a U.S. lockdown can work because it worked in China. At the height of its COVID-19 crisis in mid-February, China had locked down an estimated 760 million people, approximat­ely half of its population. This policy was so successful that Wuhan is now much safer from coronaviru­s than New York City or Washington, D.C.

The few new COVID-19 cases in China stem from foreign travelers rather than local transmissi­on, and all are safely quarantine­d.

We know what we have to do. President Donald Trump, governors and local leaders must act now to save millions of lives.

Yaneer Bar-Yam is the founding president of the New England Complex Systems Institute, where he is an expert on pandemics and other complex systems. He is spearheadi­ng the effort of over 3,000 volunteers working to stop the outbreak at endcoronav­irus.org. WANT TO COMMENT? Have Your Say at letters@usatoday.com, @usatodayop­inion on Twitter and facebook.com/usatodayop­inion. Comments are edited for length and clarity. Content submitted to USA TODAY may appear in print, digital or other forms. For letters, include name, address and phone number. Letters may be mailed to 7950 Jones Branch Drive, McLean, VA, 22108.

 ?? JACK GRUBER/USA TODAY ?? Since the weekend, Washington has restricted access to the National Mall.
JACK GRUBER/USA TODAY Since the weekend, Washington has restricted access to the National Mall.
 ?? ERIC BARADAT/AFP VIA GETTY IMAGES ?? Cherry blossoms crowd in Washington, D.C., on Saturday.
ERIC BARADAT/AFP VIA GETTY IMAGES Cherry blossoms crowd in Washington, D.C., on Saturday.

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