Houston Chronicle

Four ways to control pandemic by July 4

- By James McDeavitt McDeavitt is the senior vice president and dean of clinical affairs at Baylor College of Medicine.

As I write this, I sit less than a mile away from the football stadium at Rice University where John F. Kennedy delivered his stirring “moon speech,” a national call to action that set the United States on the path to landing a man on the moon. Three decades later, Jim Collins would use this as an example of a Big Hairy Audacious Goal, or BHAG. A goal that is simple and compelling. A goal that instantly resonates and is readily understood. A goal that creates a frame of reference for all future planning, decisions and action. It is a call to arms.

As our viral numbers in Houston now thankfully seem to be in decline, it seems to me the United States needs a national BHAG. Throughout history we have taken pride in ourselves as a nation that could do great things. As a nation that could simultaneo­usly give voice to dissenting opinions yet pull together in times of crisis. Now we seem to be a nation that is half a step behind much of the world, one committed to polarizati­on rather than unity. We should demand more of ourselves. We need a call to arms.

Here is my goal: Declare July 4, 2021, COVID-19 Independen­ce Day — the day we drive the virus to a low enough level we can safely resume our lives. Businesses can reopen. People can work. Travel can resume. Grandchild­ren can visit grandparen­ts. People can congregate in places of worship, graduation­s, theaters, sports venues and even bars.

It is easy to declare a goal, but much harder to create a national unity of purpose. In my view, here is what needs to be done:

Declare a six-month truce

At the highest possible level, leaders of both parties should link arms and publicly commit to a spirit of cooperatio­n in fighting the virus. Draft a written pledge. Encourage leaders across the political spectrum to sign. Work collaborat­ively. Focus legislativ­e efforts on doing everything necessary to exceed the July 4 goal. On the federal level, work relentless­ly to guarantee a steady vaccine supply. On a local level, drive collaborat­ive efforts to get vaccine into arms.

Whatever label describes you — liberal, conservati­ve, progressiv­e, populist — whether you gravitate toward the political center or tilt toward the extremes, let us publicly and deliberate­ly remind ourselves that our clear and present danger is a microscopi­c virus.

What is the single most important thing we can do to promote social equity? Eliminate the virus. How do we best provide relief to those impacted by the pandemic? Eliminate the virus. How can we aggressive­ly promote economic growth and full employment? Eliminate the virus.

Turbo-boost the CDC

If this were a moonshot, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention would be our NASA and would impact every objective on this list.

Short-term, the CDC should have no financial constraint­s. The agency should have access to the best minds in the country. The CDC should be contained within a political firewall and serve as our trusted arbitrator of scientific truth.

Remember, science is more than sequencing the viral genome. It provides evidence-based guidelines across the entire spectrum of infection control activities, from the basic science of vaccine developmen­t to the social science of overcoming vaccine hesitancy in minority population­s.

Define metrics for success

To achieve our goal, every community should understand their existing disease burden. Everyone should understand what result constitute­s success. One metric we should track should be vaccine administra­tion progress. One hundred million doses over 100 days (1 million per day) is not a stretch, it is the minimum necessary. We are already administer­ing shots at that pace. To achieve herd immunity by our July 4 date we need a more aspiration­al target — something in the range of 2 million doses administer­ed per day, seven days a week.

And we cannot leave vulnerable population­s behind. Our experience to date has shown that states with overly nuanced, complex and precise rules regarding vaccine eligibilit­y have a much lower rate of vaccinatio­n. Keep it simple.

Take the new variants seriously

One big threat to our goal is the potential emergence and spread of more infectious variants, or variants that cause more worries about vaccine efficacy. We need more testing, sequencing, surveillan­ce and containmen­t. We failed this national test a year ago when COVID-19 first burst onto the scene. Now we have a chance to get it right. We should do everything possible to contain its emerging and potentiall­y more lethal cousin.

We are all individual­ly responsibl­e. Everyone must do all they can to keep from being infected and from infecting others. This is the most challengin­g message because all have COVID fatigue.

We should embrace this challenge not because it is easy, but because it is hard. Because the goal will serve to organize and measure the best of our energies and skills. Because it is a challenge we are willing to accept, one we are unwilling to postpone and one which we intend to win.

 ?? Marie D. De Jesús / Staff file photo ?? RN Linda Fletcher holds Pfizer shots on Dec. 15, the first day of staff shots at Baylor St. Luke’s Medical Center.
Marie D. De Jesús / Staff file photo RN Linda Fletcher holds Pfizer shots on Dec. 15, the first day of staff shots at Baylor St. Luke’s Medical Center.

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