Boston Herald

Trump winning vaccine debate with public health experts

- By Tyler Cowen Tyler Cowen is a syndicated columnist.

The U.S. Centers for Disease Control has just told states to prepare for a possible vaccine as early as November, putting the issue of vaccine approval front and center. So consider this column an open letter to scientists, researcher­s and other experts in public health. I have some news for you: In the debate over how quickly the Food and Drug Administra­tion should approve a vaccine for COVID-19, and over concern about premature approval, you are losing to President Trump.

Right now your arguments are simply not good enough. To be clear, I am inclined to agree with you, as I am not myself flying around the world, trying to get the “early vaccines” from Russia and China. Yet the all-important question of the optimal speed of vaccine approval deserves far more attention. The Federal Reserve puts hundreds of economists on the task of figuring out the best monetary policy. There should be an equal number of you in the field of public health studying vaccine policy.

One of your weaker arguments is that Trump’s push is disturbing because it is making the FDA “too political.” First, American responses to crises, such as Sept. 11 or the Great Recession, have always been political. Second, there is a strong case that the FDA should take politics into account more, not less.

The FDA has been too risk-averse in the very recent past, for instance in its reluctance to approve additional COVID-19 testing. Economists have generally concluded that the FDA is too risk-averse in the long term as well, considerin­g all relevant trade-offs. What kind of fix might there be for those problems, if not a “political” one? Of course the initial risk-aversion was itself the result of a political calculatio­n, namely the desire to avoid blame from the public and from Congress.

An interdisci­plinary group of experts has promoted the idea of so-called human challenge trials to get vaccines tested more quickly and accelerate the fight against COVID-19. The FDA did not endorse this idea, despite its value, partly (and certainly) for political reasons.

As a public health expert, you are also missing the broader context behind the current vaccine debate. In the early months of the pandemic, as late as April, it was common to hear that there might not be a vaccine for at least four years, and many were not sure if it would be possible at all. It is now likely (though not certain) that there will be a pretty good vaccine within a year.

That is a wonderful developmen­t, and it speaks well of your intelligen­ce and hard work. Still, given that recent history, is it crazy for the American people to wonder if the process could be accelerate­d further? After all, the Chinese have a vaccine right now (albeit probably an inferior one), and they have been known to complete complicate­d infrastruc­ture projects with a speed not previously thought possible.

Some of you cite the World Health Organizati­on’s recommenda­tion that “successful vaccines should show an estimated risk reduction of at least onehalf.” Again, that might well be correct, but has the WHO proven so reliable so far, for instance on mask-wearing? Can you be so sure that a general WHO estimate is correct for what is a unique pandemic?

It’s not just about wanting to speed things up. One might argue that, due to the unpreceden­tedly high number of vaccines currently under considerat­ion, the optimal threshold should be higher, not lower, for fear that the world will be left with a suboptimal choice.

Many of you in public health also argue that the speedy approval of a vaccine would damage your credibilit­y and the cause of public health more generally. That may well be true, but there is a utilitaria­n argument for risking that credibilit­y in an effort to get a vaccine more quickly. At any rate, it is entirely possible that the credibilit­y of public health authoritie­s will decline anyway — even, or especially, if there is a slower vaccine approval process.

 ?? ap File ?? SHOT IN THE ARM: President Trump listens to Dr. Kizzmekia Corbett, left, a senior research fellow and scientific lead for coronaviru­s vaccines and immunopath­ogenesis team, as he tours the Viral Pathogenes­is Laboratory at the National Institutes of Health in Bethesda, Md. Trump is pushing for faster approval of coronaviru­s vaccines.
ap File SHOT IN THE ARM: President Trump listens to Dr. Kizzmekia Corbett, left, a senior research fellow and scientific lead for coronaviru­s vaccines and immunopath­ogenesis team, as he tours the Viral Pathogenes­is Laboratory at the National Institutes of Health in Bethesda, Md. Trump is pushing for faster approval of coronaviru­s vaccines.

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