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Many US Health Experts Underestimated the Coronavirus 鈥 Until It Was Too Late

A year ago, while many Americans were finishing their holiday shopping and finalizing travel plans, doctors in , were battling a mysterious outbreak of with

Chinese doctors they were witnessing the return of severe acute respiratory syndrome, or SARS, a coronavirus that emerged in and spread to 8,000 people worldwide, killing almost 800.

The disease and disappeared by 2004.

Although the disease hasn鈥檛 been seen in 16 years, SARS cast a long shadow that colored how many nations 鈥 and U.S. scientists 鈥 reacted to its far more dangerous cousin, the novel coronavirus that causes COVID-19.

When Chinese officials revealed that their pneumonia outbreak was caused by another new coronavirus, Asian countries hit hard by SARS , said a senior scholar at the Johns Hopkins Center for Health Security. and had already learned the importance of a rapid response that included widespread testing, contact tracing and isolating infected people.

The U.S., by contrast, learned all the wrong lessons.

This country鈥檚 20-year run of good luck with emerging pathogens 鈥攊ncluding , but also , and of 鈥 gave us a 鈥渇alse sense of security,鈥 Adalja said.

KHN鈥檚 in-depth examination of the year-long pandemic shows that many leading infectious disease specialists underestimated the fast-moving outbreak in its first weeks and months, assuming that the United States would again emerge largely unscathed. American hubris prevented the country from reacting as quickly and effectively as Asian nations, Adalja said.

During the first two decades of this century, 鈥渢here were a lot of fire alarms with no fire, so people tended to ignore this one,鈥 said Lawrence Gostin, director of Georgetown鈥檚 O鈥橬eill Institute for National and Global Health Law, who acknowledges he underestimated the virus in its first few weeks.

In a Jan. 24 story, Dr. William Schaffner told KHN the real danger to Americans was the common flu, which can kill up to 61,000 Americans a year.

鈥淐oronavirus will be a blip on the horizon in comparison,鈥 said Schaffner, a professor of preventive medicine and health policy at Vanderbilt University Medical Center. 鈥淭he risk is trivial.鈥

The same day, published a column by Dr. Howard Markel, who questioned China鈥檚 . 鈥淚t鈥檚 possible that this coronavirus may not be highly contagious, and it may not be all that deadly,鈥 wrote Markel, director of the Center for the History of Medicine at the University of Michigan.

JAMA, one of the most prestigious medical journals in the world, published titled, 鈥淭he 2020 Influenza Epidemic 鈥 More Serious Than Coronavirus in the US.鈥 A week later, JAMA published illustrating the dangers of flu and minimizing the risks from the novel virus.

Dr. Paul Offit, who led development of a rotavirus vaccine, predicted that the coronavirus, like most respiratory bugs, would fade in the summer.

鈥淚 can鈥檛 imagine, frankly, that it would cause even one-tenth of the damage that influenza causes every year in the United States,鈥 Offit told Christiane Amanpour in a .

President Donald Trump , predicting that the coronavirus would disappear by April and that it was . Trump later said the country was on the pandemic, even as the number of deaths exploded to record levels.

, an epidemiologist and assistant professor at the Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health, 鈥 and tweeted 鈥 about the novel coronavirus from the beginning. But she said public health officials try to balance those fears with the reality that most small outbreaks in other countries typically don鈥檛 become global threats.

鈥淚f you cry wolf too often, people will never pay attention,鈥 said epidemiologist Mark Wilson, an emeritus professor at the University of Michigan School of Public Health.

Experts were hesitant to predict the novel coronavirus was 鈥渇or fear of seeming alarmist,鈥 said Dr. C茅line Gounder, an infectious disease specialist advising President-elect Joe Biden.

Many experts fell victim to said Dr. Nicole Lurie, who served as assistant secretary for preparedness and response during the Obama administration.

鈥淚t鈥檚 hard to think about the unthinkable,鈥 Lurie said. 鈥淔or people whose focus and fear was bioterrorism, they had a world view that Mother Nature could never be such a bad actor. If it wasn鈥檛 bioterrorism, then it couldn鈥檛 be so bad.鈥

Had more experts realized what was coming, the nation could have been far better prepared. The U.S. could have gotten a head start on manufacturing personal protective equipment, ventilators and other supplies, said Dr. Nicholas Christakis, author of 鈥淎pollo's Arrow: The Profound and Enduring Impact of Coronavirus on the Way We Live.鈥

鈥淲hy did we waste two months that the Chinese essentially bought for us?鈥 Christakis asked. 鈥淲e could have gotten billions of dollars into testing. We could have had better public messaging that we were about to be invaded. 鈥 But we were not prepared.鈥

Dr. Fauci Doesn鈥檛 Cast Blame

Dr. Anthony Fauci, the nation鈥檚 top infectious disease official, isn鈥檛 so critical. In an interview, he said there was how dangerous the coronavirus would become, given the limited information available in January.

鈥淚 wouldn鈥檛 criticize people who said there鈥檚 a pretty good chance that it鈥檚 going to or MERS,鈥 said Fauci, director of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases, noting this was 鈥渁 reasonable assumption.鈥

It鈥檚 so easy to go back with the retrospect-o-scope and say 鈥榊ou coulda, shoulda, woulda.鈥

-- Dr. Anthony Fauci

Fauci noted that solutions are always clearer in hindsight, adding that public health authorities lose credibility if they respond to every new germ as if it鈥檚 a national disaster. He has repeatedly said scientists need to be humble enough to recognize how little we still don鈥檛 know about this new threat.

鈥淚t鈥檚 so easy to go back with the retrospect-o-scope and say 鈥榊ou coulda, shoulda, woulda,鈥欌 Fauci said. 鈥淵ou can say we should have shut things down much earlier because of silent spread in the community. But what would the average man or woman on the street have done if we said, 鈥榊ou鈥檝e got to close down the country because of three or four cases?鈥欌

Scientists largely have been willing to admit their errors and update their assessments when new data becomes available.

鈥淚f you鈥檙e going to be wrong, be wrong in front of millions of people,鈥 Offit joked about his PBS interview. 鈥淢ake a complete ass of yourself.鈥

Scientists say their response to the novel coronavirus would have been more aggressive if people had realized how easily it spreads, even before infected people develop symptoms 鈥 and that many people remain asymptomatic. 鈥淔or a virus to have pandemic potential, that is one of the greatest assets it can have,鈥 Adalja said.

Although COVID-19 has a lower death rate than SARS and MERS, its ability to spread silently throughout a community makes it more dangerous, said Dr. Kathleen Neuzil, director of the Center for Vaccine Development at the University of Maryland School of Medicine.

People infected with SARS and MERS are contagious only after they begin coughing and experiencing other symptoms; patients without symptoms don鈥檛 spread either disease.

With SARS and MERS, 鈥渨hen people got sick, they got sick pretty badly and went right to the hospital and weren鈥檛 walking around transmitting it,鈥 Christakis said.

Because it鈥檚 possible to quarantine people with SARS and MERS before they begin spreading the virus, 鈥渋t was easier to put a moat around them,鈥 said Offit.

Based on their knowledge of SARS and MERS, doctors believed they could contain the novel coronavirus by . In the first few months of the pandemic, there appeared to be no need for healthy people to wear masks. That led health officials, including U.S. Surgeon General Jerome Adams,聽to admonish Americans not to buy up limited supplies of face masks, which were desperately needed by hospitals.

https://twitter.com/surgeon_general/status/1233725785283932160?lang=en

鈥淲e are always fighting the last epidemic,鈥 Markel said. 鈥淥ur experiences with coronaviruses was that they kind of burn themselves out in warm weather and they didn鈥檛 have the capacity to spread as viciously as this one has.鈥

Many scientists were skeptical of early anecdotes of pre-symptomatic spread.

鈥淚t takes a lot to overturn established dogma,鈥 Wilson said. 鈥淛umping on an initial finding, without corroborating it, can be just as bad as missing a new finding.鈥

As evidence of accumulated, the in April changed its advice and urged Americans to mask up in public.

I continue to be baffled that we keep making the same mistakes. It鈥檚 almost like we鈥檙e doomed to repeat this cycle endlessly.

-- Dr. Amesh Adalja

Adalja notes that the CDC鈥檚 earlier advice against wearing masks was based on research that found them to be . New research, however, has shown masks of the novel coronavirus, which spreads mainly through respiratory droplets but can travel in the air as tiny particles.

Adalja said the U.S. should have learned from its early stumbles. Yet in spite of abundant evidence, many communities still resist mandating masks or physical distancing.

鈥淚 continue to be baffled that we keep making the same mistakes,鈥 Adalja said. 鈥淚t鈥檚 almost like we鈥檙e doomed to repeat this cycle endlessly.鈥

Some Saw It Coming

There were scientists and who immediately from the novel coronavirus.

鈥淲e had to immediately react as if this were going to hit every corner of the Earth,鈥 said Adalja, who began . It was clear 鈥渢his was not a containable virus.鈥

Adalja identifying the features that allow emerging viruses to become pandemic. In that prescient report, Adalja and his co-authors highlighted the threat of certain respiratory viruses that use RNA as their genetic material.

The more Adalja learned about the novel coronavirus, the more it seemed to embody the very type of threat he had warned about: one with 鈥渆fficient human-to-human transmissibility, an appreciable case fatality rate, the absence of an effective or widely available medical countermeasure, an immunologically na茂ve population, virulence factors enabling immune system evasion, and respiratory mode of spread.鈥

Although the CDC set the wheels of its response in motion early, establishing an on Jan. 7, the agency鈥檚 . The , leading the World Health Organization to on Jan. 30 and the U.S. to announce the next day.

Adalja and other experts dismissed some of the Trump administration鈥檚 early responses, such as and a , as 鈥渨indow dressing鈥 that 鈥渟quandered resources鈥 and did little to contain the virus.

鈥淭here was political inertia about the public health actions that could have avoided lockdowns,鈥 Adalja said. 鈥淲e let this spill into hospitals 鈥 [and] if you give a virus a three-month head start, what do you expect?鈥

In a Jan. 7 of the Infectious Diseases Society of America, Dr. Daniel Lucey labeled the pneumonia 鈥淒isease X,鈥 using the WHO鈥檚 term for an , for which there are no tests, treatments or vaccines.

Lucey, adjunct professor of infectious diseases at Georgetown University Medical Center, notes that the international response was hampered by misinformation from Chinese officials. 鈥淭he Chinese government said there was no person-to-person spread,鈥 said Lucey, who traveled to China hoping to visit Wuhan. 鈥

When China revealed on Jan. 20 that Lucey knew the virus would spread much farther. 鈥淭o me, that was like Pandora鈥檚 box,鈥 Lucey said. 鈥淚 knew there would be more.鈥

When the number of on Feb. 14, Lucey said, 鈥淚 almost threw up.鈥

Although his blog is read by thousands of infectious disease specialists, Lucey emailed a special warning to journalists and a dozen doctors and public health officials, hoping to alert influential leaders.

鈥淚 put this heartfelt commentary in my email and just got silence,鈥 Lucey said.

Succeeding With Vaccines

At the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases, scientists had studied the protein structure of coronaviruses for years.

Researchers had developed a vaccine against SARS, Fauci said, although the epidemic ended before researchers could widely test it in humans.

鈥淲e showed it was safe and induced an immune response,鈥 Fauci said. 鈥淭he cases of SARS disappeared, so we couldn鈥檛 test it. 鈥 We put the vaccine in cold storage. If SARS comes back, we will do a phase 3 [clinical] trial.鈥

, deputy director of the Vaccine Research Center, asked Chinese scientists to share the coronavirus鈥檚 genetic information. After , Graham went immediately to work.

鈥淲e jumped all over it,鈥 Fauci said. 鈥淲e had a meeting on Jan. 10 and five days later they started [working on] a vaccine.鈥

Although scientists knew the COVID outbreak might end before a vaccine was needed, 鈥渨e couldn鈥檛 take the chance,鈥 Fauci said.

鈥淲e said, 鈥榃e have no idea what is going to happen, so why don鈥檛 we just go ahead and proceed with a vaccine anyway?鈥欌

Although his team worried about finding the money to pay for it all, Fauci told them, 鈥溾楧on鈥檛 worry about the money. I鈥檒l find it, you do it, if we really need it, I鈥檓 sure we鈥檒l get it.鈥欌

Health experts hope the U.S. will learn from its mistakes and be better prepared for the next threat.

Given how many novel viruses have emerged in the past two decades, it鈥檚 likely that 鈥減andemics are going to become more frequent,鈥 Gounder said, making it critical to be ready for the next one.

Of all the lessons learned during the pandemic, the most important is that 鈥渨e can鈥檛 be this unprepared again,鈥 said Dr. Tom Frieden, who directed the CDC during the Obama administration.

鈥淭o me, this should be the most teachable moment of our lifetime, in terms of the need to strengthen public health in the United States and globally,鈥 Frieden said.

But Gounder notes that U.S. public health funding tends to follow a cycle of crisis and neglect. The U.S. increased spending on public health and emergency preparedness after the 9/11 and anthrax attacks in 2001, but that funding has declined sharply over the years.

鈥淲e tend to invest a lot in that moment of crisis,鈥 Gounder said. 鈥淲hen the crisis fades, we cut the budget. That leads us to be really vulnerable.鈥

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