4/1/2020 - Betsy McCaughey Townhall.com
President
Donald Trump is extending the nation's shutdown at least until the end of
April. He's largely basing his decision on predictions from the University of
Washington that even if the nation sticks to the shutdown, 83,967 Americans
will die of coronavirus by early August, including 15,788 in New York state.
Deaths
will likely soar over the next two weeks, with the daily toll peaking April 15,
and then dropping off sharply by June. The graph of the coming death toll looks
like a steep mountain peak we are just about to ascend. And that's with the
shutdown continuing.
You
can go here to see some of the same predictions the president is watching:
covid19.healthdata.org/projections. They're adjusted every Monday based on news
from foreign countries, public health officials and hospitals across the U.S.
Admittedly, working off of projections involves guesswork, but it beats flying
blind.
From
the start, UW scientists predicted New York would be hit earliest and hardest.
Governor Andrew Cuomo said on Monday, "I want to prepare for that
apex." That's expected on April 9, when 73,620 hospital beds will likely
be needed for coronavirus patients, and on April 10, when deaths per day are
expected to max out in New York state.
The
UW experts predict New York will need 9,055 ventilators. Cuomo is predicting
30,000. No problem. It's the governor's job to plan for the worst-case scenario
and to stockpile for the possible return of the virus in the fall. And it's the
president's job to allocate the ventilators to every state based on need. The
rest is political brouhaha.
Despite
speculation that warm temperatures tame the virus, Florida is predicted to be
among the hardest hit, with 5,568 deaths by August. Still, that's far less than
half New York's toll, though Florida is a more populous state. One reason is
that Florida has enough hospital beds. When health systems are overloaded,
patients have a lower chance of surviving. In Italy, more than 10% of
coronavirus patients are dying. The hospital system simply can't handle them.
Survival
is the issue, but here in the U.S. lives are also being threatened by layoffs
and business failures, which will inevitably lead to suicides, drug overdoses
and heart attacks. Many are asking why we should shut down the nation for this
virus when the seasonal flu kills 60,000 Americans in a bad year. The country
doesn't shut down for that.
Keep
this in mind. The coronavirus is forecast to kill 80,000 Americans even with
the draconian shutdown. Without it, the death toll, say some experts, could be
as many as 2 million.
In
part, that speculative forecast is based on the belief that coronavirus is
estimated at 10 times the seasonal flu, But we don't know that for sure,
because so little testing has been done. The death rate is a fraction. We know
who's died -- the numerator. We don't know who has caught the virus and
survived -- the denominator.
Regardless,
the major reason coronavirus is more deadly is that it is overwhelming an
unprepared health care system. The flu season spans almost half the year. This
coronavirus is attacking in a compressed time frame, necessitating a huge
supply of ventilators, masks, beds and other supplies.
Coronavirus
also strains the health care system more by putting people in the hospital and
on ventilators for weeks, while hospital patients with seasonal flu stay only a
couple of days. The shutdown is designed to "flatten the curve,"
meaning slow the spread enough to allow our shamefully understocked health care
systems to function.
Shamefully
is the right word. For the past 20 years, through Democratic and Republican
presidencies, health officials were warned about the lack of emergency medical
supplies, including masks and ventilators. Ten federal reports sounded that
alarm, even as the nation witnessed one pandemic after another circle the
globe: SARS, MERS, avian flu, swine flu. Federal health bureaucrats dithered
despite the warnings. They kept the Strategic National Stockpile budget to
about $595 million, even as they spent nearly 10 times that on medical aid to
Africa during the Ebola crisis.
In
short, federal health officials got caught with their pants down. It's our
unpreparedness, more than the virus itself, that has necessitated the shutdown.
This
preparedness lesson will be key to conquering the next pandemic, or the return
of coronavirus in the fall, a possibility. Thanks to American ingenuity and
impressive wartime mobilization of the private sector, we will likely have
drugs to treat the victims and a vaccine near completion. Most important, we'll
have a supply chain of lifesaving medical equipment within reach.
Betsy
McCaughey is chairman of the Committee to Reduce Infection Deaths and a former
lieutenant governor of New York. Contact her at betsy@betsymccaughey.com.
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