USA TODAY US Edition

Experts: Selfishnes­s hampered America’s response

- Michael Ollove Stateline | Pew Charitable Trusts

COVID-19 has scrambled the meaning of American exceptiona­lism.

For a century or more, the United States has been a beacon of hope and strength to the rest of the world. But its response to the pandemic, many public health experts say, has been uniquely hapless, ineffectiv­e, undiscipli­ned and selfish. By some measures, the United States has handled the health crisis as badly as any country has.

Although the United States represents only 4% of the world’s population, it accounts for a quarter of all COVID-19 cases and 22% of all deaths.

The country whose military and economic might powered a victory in the Second World War, and whose confidence and technologi­cal wizardry planted the first human being on the moon, now finds itself as a reverse role model during the worst public health crisis in a century.

“The U.S. response – I exaggerate not – is a textbook example of how to do it wrong,” said Dr. William Schaffner, an infectious disease specialist at Vanderbilt University Medical Center.

To be sure, some American states, particular­ly in New England, have fared better than others, but that only reflects the disjointed national response, epidemiolo­gists say.

Relatively successful countries such as Denmark, Germany, Senegal and Thailand have put out messaging that is clear, consistent and transparen­t. They have implemente­d nationwide policies guided by science rather than politics. And above all, they have exerted strong national leadership.

“The first thing I would say is that they have had a national policy,” Schaffner said. “That is also the second, third and fourth thing. They had a national policy. That national policy was decided on very quickly and it was

communicat­ed clearly and consistent­ly and based on public health principles.”

Community spirit also has proven stronger elsewhere than in the U.S., some health policy experts say.

“One of the things that strikes me about the rest of the world compared to the U.S. is there is much more of a community sense,” said Dr. Krutika Kuppalli, vice chair of the Infectious Diseases Society of America’s Global Health Committee and an infectious disease doctor who has worked in Asia and on Ebola in Africa. “The U.S. is much more about ‘I’ than ‘we,’ whereas in other countries it’s more ‘we’ than ‘I.’

Anna Petherick, a researcher at the School of Government at the University of Oxford, which analyzes government COVID-19 responses, said Americans show a lot of skepticism toward government directives.

“There are good things about that attitude, but it doesn’t serve the country well at a time of crisis when you need to coordinate, when you perhaps need to give up personal freedom for the collective good,” she said.

South Korea and the United States both recorded their first cases Jan. 20, yet South Korea has held its outbreak level to 30 cases per 100,000 people, compared with the U.S. figure of 1,655 per 100,000.

Last week, New Zealand had gone 100 days without detecting a single example of community spread of the virus before encounteri­ng an outbreak that prompted the government to postpone the general election for a month. The United States surpassed 5 million cases and 160,000 dead around the same time, with cases mounting in six states and high transmissi­on rates prevailing in more than a dozen others.

Countries such as South Korea and Denmark have removed nearly all coronaviru­s-related restrictio­ns. In the U.S., authoritie­s in hot spots have either had to pause or roll back reopening some businesses. Hundreds of public health experts and medical profession­als have signed on to a letter calling for a national shutdown now, in the sixth month of the pandemic.

“If our response had been as effective as South Korea, Australia, or Singapore’s, fewer than 2,000 Americans would have died,” their letter asserts. “We could have prevented 99% of those COVID-19 deaths. But we didn’t.”

Last week, White House senior adviser Jared Kushner defended the Trump administra­tion’s strategy. In an interview with CNBC, he said the administra­tion led by overseeing the procuremen­t, production and distributi­on of masks, ventilator­s and other resources. “With regards to a national strategy, the job of the federal government was to get the resources that the country needed,” said Kushner, who is the president’s son-in-law.

“You heard all these hysterical reports about doctors on the front lines not being able to get masks, not having enough ventilator­s, you had governors requesting a lot more ventilator­s than they needed, and again, every patient in America that needed a ventilator got a ventilator. President Trump distribute­d them properly.”

How the US response was rated

Foreign Policy Analytics, an independen­t research and advisory division of the journal Foreign Policy, examined multiple metrics to gauge the performanc­e of 36 nations in responding to COVID-19.

In addition to each country’s death rate and case rate, researcher­s considered the state of each nation’s public health system before the pandemic; the timeliness and stringency of its public health actions (such as closures, social distancing, testing and contact tracing); the consistenc­y, effectiven­ess and transparen­cy of its communicat­ions; primacy of science in guiding policy; and d stimulus spending and public health funding.

“The United States is doing quite poorly,” said Fouad Pervez, a senior policy analyst at Foreign Policy Analytics and lead researcher on the index.

Of the 36 countries, the index rated the United States 31st, ahead of only Indonesia, Turkey, Mexico, Iran and China, the last of which rated worst of all primarily because of its lack of economic interventi­on and poor transparen­cy, including silencing doctors who raised early alarms about the virus.

New Zealand rated highest, followed by Senegal and Denmark. All received high marks for policy directives, economic support and consistent, clear, fact-based communicat­ions.

The index placed the United States around the median in its public policies, just above the median in its economic support and weak in its communicat­ions. The United States, the researcher­s commented, “has engaged in misinforma­tion as much as any country in the Index.” On the other hand, the authors said, the U.S. has not limited press freedom in response to the pandemic, like China and Iran did.

Not a uniform response

Countries that have done well in containing the virus have not all adopted precisely the same measures.

“New Zealand never pushed masks,” said Jennifer Nuzzo, an epidemiolo­gist with Johns Hopkins University’s Center for Health Security. Instead, she said, the island country succeeded through a large shutdown and contact tracing intensive enough to identify where most people got sick. Aiding the contact tracing was a requiremen­t that people sign into businesses or restaurant­s they visited, making them easier to track down if infections were linked to those establishm­ents.

Nuzzo said Taiwan, another island nation, also never needed to resort to a broad shutdown because it had enacted strong travel restrictio­ns and a program of aggressive testing, contact tracing and isolation of those infected. Singapore also avoided large shutdowns until “being blindsided,” Nuzzo said, by an outbreak in dormitorie­s housing migrant workers, a group that health authoritie­s had not surveilled well.

In addition to strong testing and isolation, South Korea has been aggressive in using technology in contact tracing, Kuppalli said. The country not only uses GPS tracking on cellphones – users cannot choose to opt out – but contact tracers also use closed circuit surveillan­ce and credit card activity to locate those potentiall­y exposed, techniques likely to run into resistance in the U.S.

Kuppalli, who testified before a congressio­nal committee last month contrastin­g COVID-19 responses in the United States with other countries, praised Scotland for being hyper-transparen­t about what steps it was taking and for the empathy shown by health authoritie­s.

“They have put out the messaging that everybody matters in the country, and we’re going to take care of you,” Kuppalli said.

Measured reopenings

Scotland had a broad shutdown and reopened businesses slowly, explaining all along how it was proceeding and why, Kuppalli said. Countries that followed that course had far fewer cases per capita when they loosened restrictio­ns than the United States did when states began easing rules.

“The other countries did not open until they had the virus under control in terms of having either a low number of cases or they were fully on top of their cases in terms of testing, contact tracing and quarantini­ng,” said Luisa Franzini, chair of health policy and management at the University of Maryland School of Public Health. “In the United States, some states decided to reopen when cases were not even going down.”

Some epidemiolo­gists pointed out that successful countries had national strategies as opposed to the state-bystate approach in the U.S.. Adopting measures that change at state boundaries might make sense with determinin­g speed limits, but not with communicab­le disease.

“A virus doesn’t know boundaries of different jurisdicti­ons,” Franzini said. A state with strict lockdown orders can’t protect itself from travelers from states with loose restrictio­ns, “so a haphazard approach doesn’t make sense.”

Public health experts say some of the successful countries had experienti­al advantages when COVID-19 struck.

“In contrast with the United States, people, particular­ly in South Asia, recalled the fear and the risk involved with failing to respond to SARS and MERS,” said Dr. Jon Andrus, an epidemiolo­gist and former deputy director of the Pan American Health Organizati­on. “They remember and built on their response.”

In a number of those Asian countries, the population was already used to wearing masks, Andrus said. But the mask-wearing, he said, symbolized something greater than a public health measure. “There’s an acceptance of actions to keep my community safe above any ill-informed personal-freedom approach,” Andrus said.

That attitude is not widely accepted in the United States, Andrus said, and the rest of the world is noticing.

“My friends overseas see American exceptiona­lism as selfishnes­s,” he said.

Stateline is a nonpartisa­n, nonprofit news service of the Pew Charitable Trusts that provides daily reporting and analysis on trends in state policy.

 ?? SPENCER PLATT/GETTY IMAGES ?? People stand in line to take a COVID-19 test in the Sunset Park neighborho­od of New York City, which had seen a spike in coronaviru­s cases in recent days.
SPENCER PLATT/GETTY IMAGES People stand in line to take a COVID-19 test in the Sunset Park neighborho­od of New York City, which had seen a spike in coronaviru­s cases in recent days.

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