The Daily - Confronting a Pandemic
Episode Date: March 12, 2020Global health officials have praised China and South Korea for the success of their efforts to contain the coronavirus. What are those countries getting right — and what can everyone else learn from... them?Guest: Donald G. McNeil Jr., a science and health reporter for The New York Times. For more information on today’s episode, visit nytimes.com/thedaily. Background reading: While world leaders are finally speaking out about the gravity of the pandemic, their response lacks unity with the United States absent from its traditional conductor role in managing global crises. Stocks tanked again as the outbreak was officially declared a pandemic and policies to address its impact proved lacking or ineffective.All flights to the U.S. have been suspended from Europe. Many schools announced they would close indefinitely, some nursing homes banned visitors, and workplaces across the country have urged their employees to work from home. Here are the latest updates.
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From The New York Times, I'm Michael Barbaro. This is The Daily.
Today, global health officials are singling out China and South Korea for the success of their
efforts to contain the coronavirus. Donald G. McNeil Jr. on what those countries are getting right
and what everybody else can learn from them.
It's Thursday, March 12th.
Okay.
All right. First of all, do you have a fever or a cough?
I do not have a fever or a cough
Okay
I am healthy
Here, help yourself
Thank you
Do you need me to clip on a microphone or do you want to?
No, no, no
Oh, okay So, Donald, can I just start by asking you about what I understand was a rather aggressive studio sanitation regimen that you applied?
Me, just now?
Yeah.
Somebody ratted on me, I see.
Yeah, I have a bottle of,
a little spray bottle of hydrogen peroxide
that I keep on my desk.
Who doesn't?
Yeah.
And I sprayed down the surface of this desk here
before I put my elbows on it. I also carry Purell in my pocket. And I wear one glove now, so I look like kind of an aging, completely unfunky, white Michael Jackson imitator. And then I disinfect the glove as soon as I get a chance to.
the glove as soon as I got a chance to. Well, we appreciate the fact that you were keeping our studio so clean. So I wonder, Donald, if you could tell me about this news conference on Wednesday
afternoon, what happens? Thank you. Thank you, Tariq. Good afternoon, everybody. So this was
the World Health Organization, the WHO, which is part of the United Nations.
And they held their regular Monday, Wednesday, Friday meeting on the coronavirus epidemic press conference. In the past two weeks, the number of cases of COVID-19 outside China has increased 13-fold.
And the number of affected countries has tripled.
It started off with the director general, Dr. Tedros, enunciating the new figures for
the world as he does every one of these.
There are now more than 118,000 cases in 114 countries. And 4,291 people have lost their lives. And then he went into the big news.
We have therefore made the assessment that COVID-19 can be characterized as a pandemic.
Which is that the WHO is declaring this a global pandemic.
that the WHO is declaring this a global pandemic.
Pandemic is not a word to use lightly or carelessly.
The WHO has resisted using the word,
even though it's clear the disease has spread all over the world, because they were afraid if they said it,
then countries would say,
OK, we're throwing up our hands, it's hopeless,
we're not going to be able to fight it.
The WHO has been assessing this outbreak around the clock,
and we're deeply concerned both by the alarming levels of spread and severity
and by the alarming levels of inaction.
I think they chose to use it this time because they believe that many countries
are not moving rapidly enough, are not preparing, are not taking seriously enough.
It doesn't actually change anything in the world, but it raises the level of attention.
And they're ringing the alarm bell even louder and goading people to move faster.
Right, because I've had a sense, and I think you have too,
that this has been a pandemic for quite some time.
And so this moment feels a little bit like
the weatherman coming out and telling you it's raining,
even though you've been outside soaked in the rain for hours.
Yeah, that's right.
All countries must strike a fine balance
between protecting health,
minimizing economic and social disruption, and respecting human rights.
But they want it emphasized that although this is the first pandemic ever caused by a coronavirus, they also believe this is the first pandemic that can be brought under control.
believe this is the first pandemic that can be brought under control.
More than 90% of cases are in just four countries. And two of those, China and the Republic of Korea,
have significantly declining epidemics.
And they believe that because China and South Korea appear to be bringing the epidemic under control.
We're in this together to do the right things with calm and protect the citizens of the world.
It's doable. I thank you.
Right. And I watched this news conference, and I noticed that the people overseeing this news conference singled those countries out for praise. But I wonder if that means that they were scolding other countries by omission.
In effect, yes. Other countries for not taking it seriously enough and not moving aggressively enough. But they didn't name any countries. And when they were asked to name the countries, Mike Ryan, who's the head of the emergencies program, said,
The WHO doesn't interact in public debate or criticize our member states in public. The answer to that question is, you know who you are. China is being praised here? China has cut its epidemic from over 3,500 new cases a day in late
January to only 24 new cases yesterday. Wow. That's pretty extraordinary. It's stunning. No one
thought it could be done. Public health experts to me say if they can keep the cases down as they let millions of people in China out of their houses and back into factories and subways and restaurants, if they can keep it up, then they have, you know, captured the wind.
They've done something that nobody else has ever done before.
And so how did they do it?
Really aggressive measures.
Some people call them brutal and draconian.
The WHO calls them aggressive.
So the testing regimen there is nothing like ours.
You do not go to your doctor's office and ask for a test.
They have set up fever clinics all over the place attached to hospitals.
There you're met in a separate part of the hospital, maybe even in a parking lot, by doctors completely garbed head to toe in personal protective gear.
They take your temperature.
They ask you some questions to see what your symptoms are, if you've gotten some reason to think you're exposed.
And then they quickly do a white blood cell count on you.
And if they have it, a flu test.
And those are two ways to eliminate the possibility
that you have either flu or a bacterial pneumonia.
If you're still a suspect case,
then they whip you into a CT machine.
A CAT scan.
A CAT scan.
In this country, CAT scans, you know,
take half an hour to an hour.
The portable CAT scanners they were using,
they were doing 200 scans a day on some of them.
Wow. So this is all kind of industrially scaled.
Absolutely. It is industrial diagnosis. Then, if you were still a suspect case,
whether they had the answer then or whether they wouldn't have the answer till the next day,
you still stayed with them. They found some place to put you up.
you still stayed with them.
They found someplace to put you up.
So this is kind of a no chances approach in which anyone who might have the virus
is not really given a chance to go home,
to go back to the office
and perhaps transmit it to somebody else.
They're just eliminating all those possibilities.
Correct.
There is no home quarantine in China.
Not for people who are known to be infected or suspected to be infected because they realized it wasn't working.
So when you see those pictures of the giant gymnasiums and the stadiums with beds in them, those were separate isolation areas for suspect cases who were kept away from the confirmed but mild cases.
And you had gymnasiums for men, gymnasiums for women.
I mean, these are really not gymnasiums, but hospitals.
And those for kids.
And they separated kids from their families.
And mom and dad were not allowed to visit.
Wow.
So why is it so important and effective that home isolation has been eliminated in China?
Because that feels somehow pivotal to this all.
75 to 80 percent of all the infections in China were within family clusters.
So they knew that if you got people out of the family before they infected everybody else in the family,
you could cut your caseloads.
So it sounds from what you're saying like the most distinctive element of the Chinese approach is not that kind of curtains are being dropped around entire regions of China,
although that has gotten a lot of attention,
but instead the procedures and restrictions and isolating tactics within those cordoned-off districts that the Chinese government has pursued.
That's part of it.
The other important part is they are looking incredibly aggressively for cases.
So everywhere you go, your temperature is taken.
Every building you walk into, every train station, every bus station,
even trying to get into your own apartment building,
there'll be a committee there from the apartment building committee who will take your temperature
before you go home. And if you've got a temperature, you are immediately told to
report to one of the fever clinics. So they're catching everybody with fever.
Wow. So that is China. And the portrait you have painted is of an incredibly aggressive approach.
The next country that was praised by the WHO on Wednesday was South Korea.
What has been their approach and how does it contrast with China?
South Korea started later than China. Its outbreak was mostly confined in one southern city and
mostly in the beginning to members of a very large church there, but the infection spread throughout the church like wildfire.
And so now the government is doing contact tracing
on more than 200,000 members of that church,
trying to find everyone who'd been exposed.
And they're making sure that everybody
who was in contact with those people is in quarantine
and calling in with their symptoms. And the minute they have
symptoms that indicate they might be infected, they end up going into isolation centers with
other infected people. They're not staying home with their families to infect them.
So South Korea is following the China model. And the doctor who's in charge of it, who was also
in charge during their big MERS outbreak a few years ago,
told the WHO that he believes
they're taking the heat out of the rising cases.
The cases are actually beginning to go down,
but they've been at this much less time than China has,
but they're following the model.
Okay, so Italy was not praised by the WHO,
but Italy has taken some of the most dramatic actions in Europe, which was
closing down much of the country's north, they said, and restricting movements in and out.
So why has that not risen to the level of praiseworthy, do we think, in the eyes of the WHO?
Because Italy is playing catch-up they like us right now were refusing
to take the threat seriously in the beginning they wanted to keep you know the clubs open
into the evenings they didn't want to play soccer games without fans in the stands they didn't want
to shut down movement and then in the, they discovered that they had a gigantic outbreak that has now got their intensive care units absolutely full up and a lot of people dying.
Italy is now number two in deaths in the world.
They got 600 dead out of 10,000 confirmed cases.
So they're in real trouble.
So basically, they just waited too long.
They waited too long and they were resistant to the idea of social distancing.
And also, they wanted to try to manage everybody at home, all the mal-cases at home.
They didn't want to isolate cases in centers the way the Chinese did.
And now Italy has gone to the WHO and asked them, tell us how China did it because we're out of control.
Italy wants to know how to replicate the success of China now.
Correct. Which means really aggressive measures.
We'll be right back.
Okay, Donald, finally, of course, we have the United States.
And we now know we've had major testing problems in the United States.
We talked about those on yesterday's Daily. We have outbreaks and clusters across the country. And my sense is that while a lot of
industry and educational institutions and local governments are taking actions to limit exposure
and contain the spread, the federal government in the U.S. is not taking the kind of sweeping actions we're seeing in China, in South Korea, or in Italy.
Does that feel right to you?
It's absolutely right.
I mean, we have been in a completely headless chicken phase of the response for a few weeks now where we weren't able to produce tests.
where we weren't able to produce tests.
Now we're in a sort of denial phase where, you know,
parts of the government are saying shut down South by Southwest,
shut down Comic-Con, cancel March Madness, and things like that.
And other people are saying this is all ridiculous and panic is overdone.
And the guidance from the top is confused.
We're not conveying the sense of the seriousness of the threat. People imagine that there are just going to be inconvenience. They're going to be out of school. It's going to be a long spring break. This could go its approach, is it doing any of the things that you and public health leaders have identified as the effective elements of the Chinese approach or the South Korean approach?
No.
I mean, we're not making sure that everyone is diagnosed at a fever clinic where the doctors are protected and the results are available
virtually immediately. We're not realizing that people who are infected cannot go back
to infect the rest of their families. They're going to have to go into isolation.
And we're not recognizing the fact that you may have to keep a whole lot of people
off the streets and out of the way and
find a way to feed them in order to bring the epidemic under control. Italy is realizing that
now. Unfortunately, we are basically right now following the Italian model. What do you think
it would take to change the American mentality around this and also the federal government's
level of aggression? Well, this is really sad,
but in every epidemic I've ever covered,
you know, whether that was AIDS in Africa or Zika here,
people don't believe the disease is going to get them
until somebody they know gets it and suffers.
What America may need is a Rock Hudson moment.son moment explain that okay rock hudson was incredibly
important to the awareness of aids in this country here was a man who was one of the most gorgeous
leading men of his day kissed every woman you know in hollywood on the screen and in 1985
rumors began to spread that maybe he didn't have liver cancer.
He had appeared with Doris Day, his old co-star, in a sort of promo for her series.
And he looked gaunt and was barely coherent.
And not long after that, he moved to France for treatment.
And President Ronald Reagan, who was an old friend of his, they were leading men in Hollywood together, called him at the hospital to check and see how he was doing.
And not long after that was the first time Ronald Reagan ever uttered the word AIDS in private.
Now, it had taken from 1981 when the disease was discovered until September 1985 for Ronald Reagan to say the word AIDS and for America to realize that there was a disease ravaging the gay community, but it might strike people that they knew and were familiar with and maybe never recognized were gay.
Like Rock Hudson. Like Rock Hudson. And Rock Hudson died in October, and five days later, Congress passed a bill authorizing
$220 million to find a cure for AIDS.
In other words, Rock Hudson was the catalyst for the entire country to realize just how urgently this epidemic, in that case HIV, you're suggesting now, coronavirus, needed to be confronted.
Yeah. People, unfortunately, do not believe a disease will strike them until it strikes somebody they know and identify with.
Donald, let's suppose that there is a Rock Hudson moment in the United States that really galvanizes how the public views the coronavirus and the way the government approaches it.
I still have the sense that the reason why China could do what it did is because it's an authoritarian government.
So is what they did possible in a democracy?
Can the United States, can Italy accomplish what an authoritarian country like China has done over the past few
months? It is absolutely much more difficult for a democracy where people are used to getting their
way and telling their leaders what they think to do it. But, you know, we've done this before
when the threat is big enough. When the threat is big enough, America can get organized.
Right now, it's in a lot of denial and finger pointing.
There was something that Tedros said in the WHO press conference that you have to strike a balance between the right to life and human rights and try to find that balance in your country.
And in America, we're used to enjoying our civil liberties.
We don't live in an authoritarian system.
But if what you're hoping for is life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness, you have to preserve life or the other two just aren't there.
Thank you, Donald.
You're welcome.
My fellow Americans,
tonight I want to speak with you about our nation's unprecedented response to the coronavirus outbreak that started in China and is now spreading throughout the world.
Today, the World Health Organization officially announced that this is a global pandemic. speech to the nation on Wednesday night, President Trump sought to convey the seriousness of the
epidemic, encouraging Americans to take every possible precaution, and announcing that he would
bar all travel from Europe to the United States, with the exception of the United Kingdom,
to limit the spread of the virus. To keep new cases from entering our shores, we will be suspending all travel from Europe
to the United States for the next 30 days.
The new rules will go into effect Friday at midnight.
These restrictions will be adjusted subject to conditions on the ground.
There will be exemptions.
Subject to conditions on the ground.
There will be exemptions.
Moments after the speech,
one of America's most famous actors, Tom Hanks,
announced that he and his wife, Rita,
have tested positive for the coronavirus.
We'll be right back.
Here's what else you need to know today.
On Wednesday, Harvey Weinstein was sentenced to 23 years in prison for sex crimes as the six women who had testified against him during his trial watched from the front row.
In a rambling speech, Weinstein expressed remorse,
but said he believed that his encounters with the women were consensual.
Within hours of the sentencing, prosecutors in Los Angeles
said they had begun the process of extraditing Weinstein from New York
to face different charges of sexual assault in California.
And... Last night, obviously, was not a good night for our campaign from a delegate point of view.
We lost in the largest state up for grabs yesterday, the state of Michigan.
We lost in Mississippi, Missouri, and Idaho.
During a news conference in Vermont,
Senator Bernie Sanders said he would press ahead
with his presidential campaign, despite a series of back-to-back
defeats to Joe Biden that have severely narrowed Sanders'
path to the nomination.
We are winning the generational debate. Our campaign continues to win the vast majority
of the votes of younger people. And I am talking about people not just in their 20s,
but in their 30s and their 40s. The younger generation...
Sanders made both an ideological and generational case for his candidacy,
saying that he, not Biden, represented the future of the Democratic Party.
Today, I say to the Democratic establishment,
in order to win in the future, you need to win the voters
who represent the future of our country,
and you must speak to the issues of concern to them.
That's it for The Daily. I'm Michael Barbaro. See you tomorrow.