The Mercury News

We’re America, and we’re going to fight COVID-19 our own way

- By Doyle McManus Doyle McManus is a Los Angeles Times columnist. © 2020, Los Angeles Times. Distribute­d by Tribune Content Agency.

WASHINGTON >> To hear public health experts describe it, defeating the coronaviru­s is a massive but straightfo­rward problem, difficult but not impossible while waiting for a vaccine.

First, administer tens of millions of tests to find out who has the disease. Then trace all their recent contacts, using a cellphone app that tells the government whom they met. Finally, track down all those people and order them into isolation for 14 days, possibly in a quarantine hotel.

Think about that. In a country where armed men march to defend their right not to wear masks, how will intrusive measures like those go down?

Answer: Not easily.

“My public health friends are working out brilliant solutions for the technical problems, but they haven’t confronted the challenge of political culture,” Keith Humphreys, a professor of psychiatry at Stanford’s Medical School, told me.

“What are we going to do if millions of people refuse to take the tests? What are we going to do if they refuse to isolate themselves or close their businesses?”

He’s right. Our political culture often puts individual rights before communal interests. We’re not obedient people by heritage; the Constituti­on enshrines our right to rebel. Our attachment to the Bill of Rights is one of the glories of American life.

But in a pandemic, it hinders protecting the larger community.

We’ve already seen protests against governors’ shutdown orders — protests encouraged, bizarrely, by President Donald Trump, even though the governors are following White House guidelines.

There’s been violence by hotheads who refuse shop owners’ requests to wear masks. A security guard at a Family Dollar store in Flint, Michigan, was shot and killed after he ordered a maskless customer to leave. A clerk at a Target in Van Nuys had his arm broken by another mask-averse knucklehea­d.

Some have already denounced the idea of widespread contact tracing before it’s begun — especially the proposed phone app — as an unwarrante­d data grab by Google and Apple.

And conspiracy theorists are busy denouncing the pandemic as a hoax cooked up by Bill Gates, the Democratic National Committee, or some other imaginary supervilla­in.

Resistance to masks and other public health measures, while noisy, is still a small minority. A poll released by The Washington Post and the University of Maryland last week found that only 11% of Americans think the anti-pandemic measures have been too severe, including only 32% of Republican­s.

Still, “It doesn’t take much noncomplia­nce to create problems,” Humphreys said.

Smart public health planners are already weighing how to make the next stage work, including how much to ask of those who may have been exposed to the virus.

“I don’t think you necessaril­y want to ask people to quarantine for 14 days,” Ashish Jha, director of Harvard’s Global Health Institute, told me.

“I could see a system that asks people to self-isolate for three to five days, gives them a couple of tests, and if both are negative tell them they are OK as long as they avoid large gatherings,” he added. “Is that the ideal scientific outcome? No. But we can live with it.”

If doctors can get 60% or 70% to cooperate, the contagion can still be contained — just more slowly.

That means a long, uneven slog toward reducing the danger, with some states imposing tougher measures than others.

And people are still largely free to travel to other states. As Humphreys put it, “It’s like building a no-peeing section in the swimming pool.”

All this is while awaiting an effective vaccine. Meanwhile, the anti-vaccine movement has denounced Trump’s call to develop, test and deploy 300 million doses by January as another dangerous plot.

Thanks to the anti-vaxxers, even an effective vaccine is unlikely to eradicate COVID-19 completely because some Americans will choose to remain vulnerable to it. Like measles, COVID-19 could return because some families refuse the vaccinatio­ns.

We’ll still contend with the coronaviru­s years from now — and still argue about the appropriat­e public health measures to employ.

We’re not like South Korea or Taiwan, or even Canada or Germany, countries where people trust government more than we do.

We’re America, and we’re going to do it our way — no matter how long it takes and how many mistakes we choose to make.

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