The Mercury News

What if Trump fought virus like he fought for his wall?

- Nicholas Kristof is a New York Times columnist. By Nicholas Kristof

What would America be like today if President Donald Trump had acted decisively in January to tackle the coronaviru­s, as soon as he was briefed on the danger?

One opportunit­y for decisive action came Jan. 28, when his national security adviser, Robert C. O’Brien, told Trump that the coronaviru­s “will be the biggest national security threat you face in your presidency.” Trump absorbed the warning, telling Bob Woodward days later how deadly and contagious the virus could be, according to Woodward’s new book, “Rage.”

Yet the president then misled the public by downplayin­g the virus, comparing it to the flu and saying that it would “go away.” He resisted masks, sidelined experts, held large rallies, denounced lockdowns and failed to get tests and protective equipment ready — and here we are, with Americans constituti­ng 4% of the world’s population and 22% of COVID-19 deaths.

There’s plenty of blame to be directed as well at local officials, nursing home managers and ordinary citizens, but Trump set the national agenda.

Suppose Trump in January — or even in February — had warned the public of the dangers, had ensured that accurate tests were widely distribute­d (Sierra Leone had tests available before the United States) and had built up a robust system of contact tracing (Congo has better contact tracing than the United States).

Suppose he had ramped up production of masks and empowered the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention to lead the pandemic response, instead of marginaliz­ing its experts.

Suppose he had tried as relentless­ly to battle the virus as he has to build his wall?

If testing and contact tracing had been done right, then we would have known where hot spots were and large-scale lockdowns and layoffs might have been unnecessar­y.

The United States would still have made mistakes. We focused too much on ventilator­s and not enough on other things that might have been more useful, like face masks, blood thinners and high-flow nasal cannulas. Because of mask shortages, health messaging about their importance was bungled. Governors and mayors dithered and nursing homes weren’t adequately protected.

But many of our peer countries did better than we did not because they got everything right but because they got some things right, and then learned from mistakes.

Because of COVID-19, Trump called himself a wartime president, but he didn’t heed his generals and never ordered ammunition. In World War II, a Ford plant was configured to turn out one new B-24 bomber every hour, yet today we display none of that urgency even though Americans are dying from the virus at a faster pace than they fell in World War II.

It wasn’t as if the United States was unready. A 324-page study in October found that America was the best-prepared country in the world for a pandemic — but it didn’t imagine that the United States would fumble testing, data collection, contact tracing, communicat­ions and just about every other facet of managing a novel virus.

“The administra­tion made every single mistake you could possibly make,” Larry Brilliant, an epidemiolo­gist who early in his career helped eradicate smallpox, told me.

“We could have beaten it back,” Brilliant said. “We could have prevented the horror story we have now.”

Jeffrey Shaman, a public health expert at Columbia University, calculated that if each county in the United States had acted just two weeks earlier to order lockdowns or other control measures, then more than 90% of COVID-19 deaths could have been avoided through early May.

Shaman believes it would have been plausible for the United States to enjoy the COVID-19 mortality rate of South Korea. That would mean almost a 99% reduction in mortality.

When a pandemic response has become so politicize­d, when leadership is so absent, when health messaging is so muddled, when science is so marginaliz­ed, it’s easier to understand how the best-prepared country in the world for a pandemic could have lost 190,000 citizens to the virus.

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