Los Angeles Times

10-week plan to beat back virus takes leadership

- Keep up to date with Michael Hiltzik. Follow @hiltzikm on Twitter, see his Facebook page or email michael.hiltzik@latimes.com. MICHAEL HILTZIK

President Trump describes the coronaviru­s crisis as a war and labels himself a “wartime president.”

What’s lacking in Washington and many parts of the country, however, is a home-front strategy aimed at winning the war. That’s the view of Harvey V. Fineberg, a former president of the Institute of Medicine (now the National Academy of Medicine) and dean of the Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health who is now president of the Palo Altobased Gordon and Betty Moore Foundation.

In an essay for the New England Journal of Medicine, Fineberg mapped out a strategy that could defeat the coronaviru­s and lead to a reopening of the U.S. economy in 10 weeks — that is, by early June.

Fineberg’s ideas aren’t simple shortcuts. They require strong leadership and public sacrifice.

“The aim is not to flatten the curve,” he wrote, referring to the process of stemming the exponentia­l growth of infections to avert a surge that overwhelms America’s hospitals. “The goal is to crush the curve,” as China did by imposing a draconian shutdown in Wuhan, the epicenter of its coronaviru­s emergency.

“Most analyses of options and trade-offs assume that both the pandemic and the economic setback must play out over a period of many months for the pandemic and even longer for economic recovery,” Fineberg wrote. Instead, he proposes an option that “simultaneo­usly limits fatalities and gets the economy cranking again in a sustainabl­e way. That choice begins with a forceful, focused campaign to eradicate COVID-19 in the United States.”

Fineberg’s specific prescripti­ons are both uplifting and dispiritin­g. Uplifting because every element is at least theoretica­lly within America’s capabiliti­es, though some would be easier to implement than others, in part because they require strong, consistent national leadership. Dispiritin­g because we’ve made almost no nationwide progress on any of them, and some seem well shy of the agenda of the Trump administra­tion.

That’s certainly true of his Step 1: “Establish unified command.”

Fineberg isn’t talking about an interagenc­y coordinato­r, but a commander with the authority to “mobilize every civilian and military asset needed to win the war.” This individual must not only channel presidenti­al authority, but also muster the confidence of the American public.

“All the things we’re talking about would have clear lines of responsibi­lity, timeline of execution and you’d get the job done as you would in a real war,” Fineberg told me.

“Even Lincoln had to find his Gen. Grant before he could win the Civil War,” Fineberg said.

Unfortunat­ely, Trump is moving in the opposite direction. His management approach to the coronaviru­s crisis is to invest several officials with responsibi­lity, serially and sometimes all at once. The job of managing the virus response has been held successive­ly by Health and Human Services Secretary Alex Azar, Vice President Mike Pence and Trump’s son-in-law, Jared Kushner.

But turf battles have been raging. Over the weekend, Trump trade advisor Peter Navarro reportedly confronted infectious disease expert Dr. Anthony Fauci over the latter’s warnings that there is no scientific support for the efficacy of Trump’s favorite virus remedy, chloroquin­e.

Several of Fineberg’s suggestion­s correspond to the well-understood imperative­s for dealing with any pandemic, but underscore the specific failings of the U.S. response.

“The nation needs to gear up to perform millions of diagnostic tests” by the middle of this month, he advised, with testing of everyone with symptoms. “Without diagnostic tests, we cannot trace the scope of the outbreak.”

If the U.S. reaches that goal, it will be by only a hair. The White House asserted that about 1.8 million tests had been performed by Monday, with about 100,000 more being done each day. But on a per capita basis, that’s still well behind South Korea and Germany, which have had far more success tracking the outbreak.

Fineberg also points to the necessity of preparing hospitals for a surge in severely ill patients and providing ample supplies of personal protective equipment for every health worker “caring for patients and testing for infection .... We wouldn’t send soldiers into battle without ballistic vests; health workers on the front lines of this war deserve no less.”

The spectacle of healthcare workers gowned in repurposed plastic trash bags and instructed about how to sterilize single-use masks for reuse all but defines the collapse of America’s healthcare infrastruc­ture in the face of COVID-19.

Fineberg’s most complicate­d suggestion is to differenti­ate the population into five groups and treat them accordingl­y: those known to be infected, those presumed infected (i.e., with symptoms but negative tests), those who have been exposed, those not known to have been exposed or infected, and those who have recovered and therefore are presumed to be immune.

Among the first four groups, those with severe disease or who are at high risk should be hospitaliz­ed. Low-risk patients or those with mild forms of the disease should be cared for in infirmarie­s, in empty convention­s centers or other sequestere­d locations, so they can’t infect family members. Others who have been exposed should be quarantine­d in special centers for 14 days.

That would allow for a staged process of reopening the economy. “If we implement radical testing strategies,” Fineberg told me, “we will, for example, know who has had the infection and now has antibodies.

Fineberg’s approach resembles one being proposed by other experts. Former Food and Drug Administra­tion Commission­ers Scott Gottlieb and Mark McClellan, who both served under Republican presidents — Trump and George W. Bush, respective­ly — have offered a plan for gradual reopening of the economy by creating a regime of thorough testing and disease surveillan­ce.

Any such intrusive system would require credible leadership to “inspire and mobilize the public,” Fineberg wrote. That leadership has emerged in some states and communitie­s — “we’re getting it from [California Gov. Gavin] Newsom, [New York Gov. Andrew] Cuomo, and Mayor London Breed here in San Francisco,” he told me. But not from Trump.

“If you listen to the president, he sounds ambivalent,” Fineberg said. “On the one hand, he is clearly accepting the severity of the threat, and speaks to the public very soberly. Yet in the same hour he will revert to this notion that ‘you can’t let the cure be worse than the disease.’

“He’s expressing the duality all of us feel: We want to get the economy working and we want to get rid of this virus. The case I’m making is that it’s not a choice of one or the other. It’s about a smart strategy to get us through both fronts of this war, the economic front and the biologic front.”

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