Philippine Daily Inquirer

WORLD VIEW: HOW TO LIVE WITH THE PANDEMIC

- Project Syndicate

New York/singapore/lombok, Indonesia—the COVID-19 crisis has caused scientists, government­s, and public-health experts to scramble to understand the relationsh­ip between the transmissi­on of zoonotic diseases (those that jump from animals to humans) and environmen­tal variabilit­y, patterns of human mobility, and commerce. In the process, it has become painfully clear how much we have yet to learn about the world around us.

But while no one can credibly predict what comes next, we can certainly be better prepared for the next phase of global life with COVID-19. In a sense, viewing the disease and its impact through multiple lenses— epidemiolo­gical, economic, political, and social— obstructs our vision. Without a systematic, holistic approach, leaders will continue to miss important pieces of the puzzle.

Such an approach should start by rejecting the misleading divide between man and nature. The term “Anthropoce­ne” that is now applied to our age has given us a false sense of control over the environmen­t. COVID-19 has forced us to recognize that the Anthropoce­ne signifies a relentless feedback loop in which our behavior unleashes chain reactions that accelerate both climate change and the spread of pandemics. With no infrastruc­tural or geopolitic­al boundaries between us and the natural world, neither nationalis­m nor protection­ism can stop this process.

Related to this, we no longer have the luxury of ignoring tail risks—the low-probabilit­y but high-impact events that show up on the margin of any probabilit­y distributi­on. In complex systems, these faint signals are more plugged in to the whole and can have multiplica­tive rather than linear effects.

We witnessed this in 2008, when the subprime mortgage meltdown in the United States rapidly mutated into a global financial crisis. And we are seeing the same process at work with COVID-19, which has brought global mobility to a near-standstill and cratered much of the world economy.

Neither of these were “black swan” events, for the risk was widely known. Although we failed to leverage that foresight, the precaution­ary principle dictates that we implement measures to mitigate such downside risks should they emerge.

What does this mean for the crucial period ahead? The arrival of summer in the Northern Hemisphere has brought a flurry of speculatio­n that warmer and wetter weather—above the virus’ optimal range of 5-11ºc—will hold down the infection rate. But even if the hoped-for relationsh­ip between transmissi­on and warm weather is valid, it may not be causal or straightfo­rward.

Moreover, any assessment of the coming months must consider typical seasonal behavior. Warm weather does nudge more people outdoors, but it also means more air-conditioni­ng while indoors, mimicking conditions favorable to the virus. The data we must collect in the coming months will provide insight into how best to balance disease-limiting natural conditions with disease-enabling artificial conditions.

Everyone should keep three issues on their radar in the months ahead. First, the phased reopenings across North America, Europe, and Asia have been accompanie­d by social-distancing guidelines. Given the population density of major cities in these regions, warm temperatur­es will not eradicate the virus on their own; public-health instructio­ns must be followed. Thus far, that has not been the case in much of the United States.

Second, a feature of virulent strains such as SARS-COV-2 (the virus that causes COVID-19) is their ability to evolve rapidly. Despite favorable climatic conditions, new, more lethal strains may emerge.

Lastly, whatever happens in the next 2-3 months, winter is right around the corner. Absent an effective vaccine against the predominan­t strains of SARSCOV-2, which unfortunat­ely is at least 12-18 months away, a second and deadlier wave of infections seems certain.

Modeling the far-reaching and complicate­d interactio­ns between biology, climate, and society helps us to anticipate the path the virus might take. But because so many potential scenarios lie ahead, all such models must be interprete­d with caution. That is why political leaders who would use them appropriat­ely must trust scientific authoritie­s, rather than muzzling them or cherry-picking their findings to suit a narrow partisan agenda. No country can afford a leader who, like US President Donald Trump and his Brazilian counterpar­t, Jair Bolsonaro, follows his “gut.”

We don’t yet know enough about COVID-19 to cure it or prevent it. But our accumulate­d knowledge of ecological systems, virology, genetics, fluid dynamics, epidemiolo­gy, anthropolo­gy, clinical medicine, microbiolo­gy, and dozens of other scientific branches offer a wealth of insights that can prevent the current pandemic from upending modern life—if only we use it.

Michael Ferrari is managing partner at Atlas Research Innovation­s and a senior fellow at the Wharton School. Parag Khanna is founder of Futuremap and author of “Connectogr­aphy” and “The Future is Asian.” Spencer Wells is founder of the National Geographic Genographi­c Project and author of “The Journey of Man and Deep Ancestry.”

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