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Dying in a Leadership Vacuum

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stormyrider
(@stormyrider)
Posts: 1578
Noble Member
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Some of you may have heard about this, others not. The New England Journal of Medicine is the most prestigious medical journal in the US, if not the world. It is not political. It is not affiliated with the AMA. The only "bias", if there is one, is health care and the best science available. In the past, when there were opposing views on health care plans, it published op eds from both sides (example Obama and McCain each wrote about their plans prior to the 2008 election). It does not take positions in elections - until now. 

"The truth is neither liberal nor conservative"

https://www.nejm.org/doi/full/10.1056/NEJMe2029812?query=featured_home

 

Dying in a Leadership Vacuum 

The Editors

Covid-19 has created a crisis throughout the world. This crisis has produced a test of leadership. With no good options to combat a novel pathogen, countries were forced to make hard choices about how to respond. Here in the United States, our leaders have failed that test. They have taken a crisis and turned it into a tragedy.

The magnitude of this failure is astonishing. According to the Johns Hopkins Center for Systems Science and Engineering,1 the United States leads the world in Covid-19 cases and in deaths due to the disease, far exceeding the numbers in much larger countries, such as China. The death rate in this country is more than double that of Canada, exceeds that of Japan, a country with a vulnerable and elderly population, by a factor of almost 50, and even dwarfs the rates in lower-middle-income countries, such as Vietnam, by a factor of almost 2000. Covid-19 is an overwhelming challenge, and many factors contribute to its severity. But the one we can control is how we behave. And in the United States we have consistently behaved poorly.

 

 

This topic was modified 4 years ago by stormyrider
 
Posted : October 10, 2020 2:49 pm
Randall reacted
gina
 gina
(@gina)
Posts: 4801
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I read the NEJM article, firstly this is the first big pandemic we have faced, other than the swine flu.  The petty bickering that went on between the NY Governor and Trump was awful.  We had baseball players working on using their status and clout to get ventilators here.  That should not have happened.  Pointing fingers in a pandemic is more than bad policy.  At one point 800 people were dieing every day in New York City.  400,000 people moved, they had enough.  

Governments have a responsibility to be honest with the public and make available the things they need in a crisis. If the second round of the virus occurs at the same time as the flu, what will the response be? 

The issues of shutting down the country to save lives seem like the right thing to do, opponents say but the economic losses can put the country in a depression possibly unrecoverable.  I don't know what the answer is, but I know it is not putting people in FEMA camps when the pandemic is aerosolized.

We have a chance to vote.  We should be asking ALL our representatives what concrete, specific things they would do to handle a second round of Covid or worse.  If they do not have answers they do not deserve our votes. 

 

 
Posted : October 10, 2020 2:59 pm
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