Tuesday, January 03, 2023

“You have to take on the anti-science community, aggressively,” he says, “because if you don’t neutralize it, it just grows and gets more organized....

 “These bad actors משוגעים whoever they are, need to be identified so that the public knows that these people are making stuff up or lying — and they’re twisting and distorting things”

Six Lessons We’ve Learned From Covid That Will Help Us Fight the Next Pandemic

Public health experts weigh in on the steps America needs to take to stem a future outbreak

Line for Covid Tests
Residents of Washington, D.C. wait in line to get Covid-19 test kits in December of 2021. The United States lagged behind other nations in testing during the first few months of the pandemic.
 

It has been three years since the first reported Covid-19 case in Wuhan, China, and more than 6.6 million people have died from this disease since. The United States has the highest number of Covid-19 deaths worldwide, with a sixth of the global toll. But despite this devastation, the U.S. may not be ready for the next pandemic: Experts say they can easily imagine a virus that is as infectious (if not more infectious) than the coronavirus but far more deadly. “If this was our test run, I think we mostly failed,” says Bob Wachter, chair of the Department of Medicine at the University of California, San Francisco.

So, what went wrong? No one answer can explain everything, and Amy Acton, former director of the Ohio Department of Health, thinks the U.S. needs to establish a 9/11-style commission to study the pandemic response and improve preparedness going forward. With the country seemingly ready to move on, though, nobody can say when this commission will happen, if ever.

In this absence, we reached out to public health experts to distill six lessons we’ve learned from Covid-19 that could help us fight the next pandemic.

READ IT ALL: קרא משהו, זה לא יהרוג אותך

https://www.smithsonianmag.com/science-nature/six-lessons-weve-learned-from-covid-that-will-help-us-fight-the-next-pandemic-180981371/?utm_source=smithsonian-daily&utm_medium=email&utm_campaign=editorial&spMailingID=47825139&spUserID=MTAwOTA4NTE0MjE5MQS2&spJobID=2380206018&spReportId=MjM4MDIwNjAxOAS2

5 comments:

  1. What the government has is a credibility problem.

    Bibi Netanyahu at least understood that the China Virus had to be fought with a military mentality (and indeed, the military and the security establishments all played a role). It is unfortunate that he lacked (and still lacks) the credibility that Dr. Acton has, and that his political interactions included buckling under to the anti-science crowd.

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  2. Nope, the US and Canada (where I live) have learned nothing.
    When China announced that, despite wildfire spread of the virus, they were once again allowing free travel to the rest of the world, it took Canada a week to announce that pre-flight negative tests would be required to enter the country. Don't wanna be racist.
    And that's exactly how this whole thing starts in January 2020 and back then Canada also said they weren't going to restrict arrivals from China because, well, don't wanna be racist.
    We've learned nothing.

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  3. The other problem with fighting the anti-science community is that the science community keeps giving them ammunition. As the Twitter files expose showed, government and scientists were silencing dissenting opinions and data that didn't fit their official narrative. A liar can't call out another liar.

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  4. Do the hard work, research & search for the scientist and doctor that earned your trust! The one that comes to mind is Dr. Larry Brilliant - (hu shmo cain) I'm sure there are more...Aron Glatt...

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  5. Exactly. Know who to trust. The problem is that they too are relying on data from others and who knows if you can trust those sources.

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