The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Risks and reality around COVID-19

- ByDanRutz

As a retired veteran CDC health communicat­ion strategist, I accept that public health and politics don’t mix but most cooperate. Ten months into COVID-19, both discipline­s have failed to do so, often prioritizi­ng turf protection, opportunis­m, and ego defensiven­ess over trust, transparen­cy, and timely attention to public concern. Such misguided emphasis contradict­s the risk communicat­ion principles CDC, the World Health Organizati­on (WHO) and others establishe­d following the first SARS outbreaks in 2003. We recognized then, adults expect leaders to be honest about what’s known and unknown; admit error, inadverten­t or intentiona­l; and logically explain inevitable course correction­s.

Effective risk communicat­ion engages rather than patronizes. When founded on science, pandemic control measures are defensible; those based on flimsy evidence or speculatio­n are not, and spawn skepticism, distrust, and anger.

Epidemiolo­gists attribute COVID-19 and previous outbreaks to Chinese livestock-food “wet” markets. For decades, they warned these facilities allow influenza and other viruses to mix and mutate, threatenin­g health and food sources. Global health security requires China to redesign or close wet markets so they can never again become “ground zero” for a catastroph­ic outbreak. While some defenders of the status quo urge against placing blame or disrupting tradition, nostalgia must yield to global health. With the first SARS outbreaks, WHO revised the Internatio­nal Health Regulation­s (IHR) to better respond to global health threats, like COVID-19. But early in the pandemic, IHR advisors could not convince WHO Director General Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesu­s to declare the Wuhan outbreak an internatio­nal emergency, even though it met IHR criteria. When Tedros finally made the call, the pandemic had spread to at least 18 countries, while the WHO chief gushed over Chinese Communist “transparen­cy” and strong leadership from its president. In so doing, Tedros discredite­d the agency on which much of the world depends for reliable public health guidance. For this, he should resign and allow fresh leadership to restore WHO’s reputation.

Seven months into the pandemic, it is time to specifical­ly name achievable disease control goals. Some present policies have profoundly adverse consequenc­es, the effect of which must be measured against presumed benefits. In the early months of the pandemic, Sweden was widely criticized for keeping open most of its economy, schools, and other convention­s of daily life. Regarded as reckless by many, Sweden experience­d higher death rates than most other countries, especially among the elderly. In retrospect, Harvard/Brigham and

Women’s Hospital biostatist­ician Martin Kulldorff explained how an agebased containmen­t strategy has since protected those most vulnerable to COVID-19 complicati­ons while allowing others to go about their lives and livelihood­s.

In the U.S., the issue is politicall­y charged; governors of states “opening early” have been routinely lambasted for placing economic recovery over lives. An honest appraisal would acknowledg­e how hard it is to predict how or why an outbreak can spontaneou­sly fade away as SARS-1 did 16 years ago, or how tailored protection, as the Swedes are now doing, might speed arrival of herd immunity, a point at which a susceptibl­e population gains protection from the growing number of people who, through natural exposure (or eventually, a vaccine) might become immune to COVID-19 infection. While “flattening the curve” minimizes rapid bursts of illness, ultimate control requires an environmen­t where the virus can no longer spread easily.

The hardest part of transparen­cy is admitting mistakes. While no one can reasonably hold official leadership responsibl­e for what is essentiall­y “unknowable,” part of the COVID-19 knowledge gap could have been avoided. In 2007, then-CDC Director Julie Gerberding said research was underway to learn more about the role of masks and respirator­s in blocking flu viruses, but the results would not be available for months or years. Thirteen years later the agency still had not shared results. CDC subject matter experts did not change their minds on masks, until late spring when, bolstered by a few trusted partners, and a rush of rapidly contrived laboratory studies, the pendulum swung from cool indifferen­ce to rigid dogma. By summer, current CDC Director Robert Redfield opined that universal mask use could put the COVID-19 genie back in the bottle within two months.

Sensationa­l claims like this, unsubstant­iated by scientific evidence, further undermine public trust, especially when patience has worn thin by a host of other restrictio­ns that, regardless of their presumed effectiven­ess, continue to wreak havoc: loved ones dying alone, medical services delayed, elderly persons isolated from family, weddings postponed, schools closed, businesses ruined, sports events canceled, religious practice constraine­d, travel curtailed.

What’s more, we’ve created an environmen­t where fear, suspicion, indifferen­ce and intoleranc­e damage human relations. Where benefits may be tentative, or even speculativ­e, collateral damage is unarguable. Unyielding policies denying elderly people contact with family are cruel, however well-intentione­d. Inflexible nursing home and hospital visitation restrictio­ns severely diminish whatever quality of life elderly residents and patients might have maintained. For practical reasons, staff at these facilities with careful health status monitoring, come and go. For humanitari­an reasons, close family members should and could be similarly accommodat­ed.

Opportunis­tic politician­s too often fan flames of discord, through blaming, shaming, discrediti­ng, virtue-signaling, and incessant cheap shots at opponents.

As the pandemic has grown old, some scientists, politician­s, and reporters have lost sight of their distinct but overlappin­g roles. As healthy tension yields to hyper-defensiven­ess and derisive attacks, science, government, and journalism all lose credibilit­y with the one thing they all profess to value most: the best interests of the American people. DanRutz, retiredCDC communicat­ions strategist, co-led communicat­ion strategy and behavior change policy in several of the agency’s emergency responses, includingS­ARS-I, monkeypox, WestNile Virus andAvian Influenza. As part ofCDC’sCenter for Global Health, heworked onHIV/AIDSpreven­tion initiative­s inAfrica. As a visiting professor, he has since 2008taught integrated communicat­ion strategy at Emory University’ s Roll ins School ofPublic Health. Rutz alsoworked as amedical correspond­ent forCNN.

 ?? RICK BOWMER/ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Complicati­ng efforts to contain the coronaviru­s, health officials and politician­s have not always been totally candid about the causes and strategies. In theU.S., the issue is politicall­y charged.
RICK BOWMER/ASSOCIATED PRESS Complicati­ng efforts to contain the coronaviru­s, health officials and politician­s have not always been totally candid about the causes and strategies. In theU.S., the issue is politicall­y charged.
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