San Diego Union-Tribune (Sunday)

VIRUS TOLLS SIMILAR DESPITE STATES’ CONTRASTIN­G ACTIONS

Raises questions about what was most impactful

- BY DAVID A. LIEB Lieb writes for The Associated Press.

Nearly a year after California Gov. Gavin Newsom ordered the nation’s first statewide shutdown because of the coronaviru­s, masks remain mandated, indoor dining and other activities are limited, and Disneyland remains closed.

By contrast, Florida has no statewide restrictio­ns. Republican Gov. Ron Desantis has prohibited municipali­ties from fining people who refuse to wear masks. And Disney World has been open since July.

Despite their differing approaches, California and Florida have experience­d almost identical outcomes in COVID-19 case rates.

How have two states that took such divergent tacks arrived at similar points?

“This is going to be an important question that we have to ask ourselves: What public health measures actually were the most impactful, and which ones had negligible effect or backfired by driving behavior undergroun­d?” said Amesh Adalja, a senior scholar at the Johns Hopkins Center for Health Security.

Though research has found that mask mandates and limits on group activities such as indoor dining can help slow the spread of the coronaviru­s, states with greater government-imposed restrictio­ns have not always fared better than those without them.

California and Florida both have a COVID-19 case rate of around 8,900 per 100,000 residents since the pandemic began, according to the federal Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. And both rank in the middle among states for COVID-19 death rates — Florida was 27th as of Friday; California was 28th.

Connecticu­t and South Dakota are another example. Both rank among the 10 worst states for COVID-19 death rates. Yet Connecticu­t Gov. Ned Lamont, a Democrat, imposed numerous statewide restrictio­ns over the past year after an early surge in deaths, while South Dakota Gov. Kristi Noem, a Republican, issued no mandates as virus deaths soared in the fall.

While Lamont ordered quarantine­s for certain outof-state visitors, Noem launched a $5 million tourism advertisin­g campaign and welcomed people to a massive motorcycle rally, which some health experts said spread the coronaviru­s throughout the Midwest.

Both contend their approach is the best.

As new COVID-19 cases decrease nationally, governors in more than half the states have taken actions during past two weeks to end or ease coronaviru­s restrictio­ns, according to an Associated Press tally.

Some capacity limits ended Friday in Maryland and Oklahoma. Michigan, Minnesota, New Jersey, New York and Wyoming are relaxing restrictio­ns in the coming week.

In almost all cases, governors have lauded their approach to the pandemic, while critics have accused them of being too stringent or too lax.

Newsom asserted that California has been a leader in combating the virus while delivering his State of the State address this past week from Dodger Stadium, where the empty seats roughly equaled the state’s 55,000 COVID-19 deaths.

“From the earliest days of this pandemic, California trusted in science and data, and we met the moment,” Newsom said.

In his own State of the State address, Desantis asserted that Florida was in better shape than others because its businesses and schools are open. Florida’s unemployme­nt rate ranked below the national average, and significan­tly lower than California’s, at the start of this year.

“While so many other states kept locking people down over these many months, Florida lifted people up,” Desantis said.

Determinin­g which approach is best is more complicate­d than just looking at statewide policies and overall case rates.

Public health experts said individual choices could help explain the similar outcomes among some states with loose or strict orders from the governor.

Some people voluntaril­y were “being more vigilant in states where the guidelines are more relaxed,” said Thomas Tsai, an assistant professor at the Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health. Yet in states with more government mandates, “people generally in public were wearing masks and following the guidelines, but in private they were letting down their guard and less vigilant,” he said.

 ?? LYNNE SLADKY AP ?? Charles Perez wears a mask and gloves as he waits tables in June in Florida.
LYNNE SLADKY AP Charles Perez wears a mask and gloves as he waits tables in June in Florida.

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