HealthCritical Reforms Needed in the US to Prevent Mass Casualties in Future...

Critical Reforms Needed in the US to Prevent Mass Casualties in Future Pandemics

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‍ ‍⁢ Credit: CC0 Public Domain

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Ahead of the 2024⁢ US‍ presidential election, The BMJ ​ has launched a forward-looking series that highlights the ⁣lessons that⁣ can be learned‌ from ⁤the US’s COVID-19 experience ​and the actions that are needed to prevent the loss of another million citizens in the next pandemic and improve ​and protect population health.

The articles, written by leading clinicians and⁤ researchers across​ the US, explore topics such as how systemic racism and economic⁣ inequality ⁤contributed to COVID-19 disparities; mass incarceration and poor prison health as⁤ a ​driver of the pandemic; labor market inequalities; and the impact of “the hollowing of ⁤the state” (the‍ diminished role of the public sector).

The authors call for ‍a⁤ set of ‍crucial systemic reforms, which​ they believe should be central ​to the manifestos of the 2024 ⁢US presidential candidates.

Importantly,‍ the aim of the series is not to assign blame—there is plenty to go​ around—but to​ look to the future‍ and lay⁣ out⁣ critical steps that need to be taken to ‍transform US public health and preparedness and improve population health more broadly.

In an editorial to ​launch the series, guest‍ editors​ Gavin Yamey at the Duke Global Health ⁢Institute,‍ Duke University and Ana ⁤V. Diez Roux at Drexel ​University Urban‌ Health Collaborative explain how during the devastating global COVID-19 pandemic, the ⁤United ⁤States suffered “eye-wateringly high” death rates compared to its peer nations.

The 1.16 million Americans killed by COVID-19 represent​ 16% of global deaths in a ​nation with 4% of the⁣ world’s population, ⁢they write. About 300,000 children are estimated to have lost one or ⁣both parents,​ and⁣ there​ is ‌a ‌substantial burden of long COVID.

The series documents‍ the many complex, inter-related causes of the poor ⁤US pandemic response,⁤ underpinned by two‌ key contexts.

The‍ first is the nation’s pre-existing ‌structural and systemic ⁤features, which ‌contributed to devastating pandemic outcomes. These ⁤include gaps in⁤ health care‍ and public health systems, the absence of social safety nets and workplace protections, ingrained social inequality, and systemic racism.

“These are key ‌reasons⁣ why the nation suffered higher COVID-19 mortality ‍rates than its more equal counterparts, and why pandemic ⁢death in⁤ the US was so closely patterned by social​ class and race,” write ‍the authors.

The second is that while the US had ⁤many‌ scientific resources, the government showed ​a troubling inability to generate ⁢reliable information, communicate it in⁤ a​ timely and consistent manner, ‍and translate⁤ it into sound policy.

These failures began at the top, argue Yamey and Diez Roux. President Trump lied frequently ‌about the pandemic, and his suggestion of using‍ bleach to fight COVID-19 “came‍ to symbolize the chaotic presidential ‍communications in the pandemic’s first year.”

Poor communication of existing evidence also​ contributed to confusion and delayed actions. Such communication ‌missteps is‌ one reason for the partisan difference in how​ quickly states acted to institute public health protections and​ in excess​ death rates during the pandemic,

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