The Economist - USA (2022-03-12)

(Antfer) #1
The Economist March 12th 2022 19
United States

Thepandemic


Must do better


T


wo years ago on March 11th, the World
Health  Organisation  declared  covid­
a  pandemic.  Americans  are  eager  to  leave
the  wretchedness  behind  them.  Some  are
so  anxious  that  they  are  driving  trucks
along the Beltway around Washington, dc,
hoping  to  slow  traffic  in  protest  against
pandemic restrictions, inspired by disrup­
tion  in  Canada  last  month.  The  “People’s
Convoy” looks strangely out of touch—not
because the truckers are alone in their de­
sire  to  put  covid  restrictions  in  the  rear­
view  mirror,  but  because  so  many  restric­
tions have already been falling away.
Polls suggest concern about covid is de­
clining. Mask­wearing has waned (a mask­
less President Joe Biden hobnobbed insou­
ciantly with members of Congress after his
state­of­the­union message last week). On
March  26th,  Hawaii  will  become  the  final
state to drop its indoor mask mandate, and
the  Centres  for  Disease  Control  and  Pre­
vention (cdc) now recommends masks on­
ly  for  the  7%  of  Americans  living  in  high­
risk counties. The vast majority of schools
are  open  for  in­person  learning.  Batman
fans  packed  into  cinemas  for  the  opening


weekend of the latest film in the franchise.
Some  states  have  long  been  crowding
people into small spaces with few restric­
tions. Over the past year Florida, Tennessee
and  Texas  banned  local  governments  and
public schools from enforcing mask man­
dates. Restrictions generally fell along par­
tisan  lines,  with  Democratic  states  stead­
fastly  adhering  to  them  and  Republican
states  tossing  them  aside.  Now  even  New
York, one of the first to impose a lockdown,
is  starting  to  lighten  up.  New  York  state
ended  its  mask  mandate  for  schools  on
March 2nd; New York City lifted its own on
March  7th.  Nationwide,  the  seven­day
moving  average  of  deaths  is  at  its  lowest
since January 2nd; that of reported cases is
at  its  lowest  since  the  Delta  variant  began
surging  in  July  2021.  For  most  Americans,
covid restrictions are in the past.
In  short,  the  pandemic  has  reached  a
punctuation  point.  Even  if  it  is  a  comma
rather than a full stop, it is a good time to
look back at how the country has fared, and
ahead to the next phase. 
America has been hit hard by covid. Ov­
er  950,000  people  have  died  from  the  vi­

rus, according to the cdc, though The Econ-
omist estimates  that  the  actual  count  is
1.1m­1.3m.  America  has  the  highest  death
rate  among  rich  countries:  nearly  double
the average (see chart on next page). Many
expected America to respond well to a pan­
demic. Instead, it vastly underperformed.
It has struggled to vaccinate its people:
65%  are  fully  vaccinated,  compared  with
72% in Britain, 73% in the European Union,
81% in Canada and 95% in the United Arab
Emirates.  America  also  fell  behind  on  de­
tection.  Last  year  it  ranked  36th  in  the
world  in  sequencing  sars­cov­2,  hinder­
ing early recognition of new variants. The
country  also  lagged  behind  in  testing.
Whereas  Britons  have  had  access  to  free
rapid  tests  for  over  a  year,  Americans  re­
ceived  their  first  round  only  last  month.
Lab tests were hard to come by, too: queues
and waits for results were long.
The  United  States  is  the  only  high­in­
come  country  without  universal  health
care. One in eight adults reports not going
to a doctor in the past year because of the
cost. The pandemic has aggravated the pro­
blem  of  access.  Hospital  capacity  was
strained, and many elective procedures de­
layed. Some states enacted crisis standards
of  care,  a  protocol  to  delineate  who  re­
ceives  treatment  when  resources  are
scarce.  “Now  that  the  covid  admission
numbers  are  falling,  we  still  have  enor­
mous  numbers  of  patients  requiring  ad­
mission because of delays of care that have
been occurring all through the pandemic,”
says  Jeffrey  Balser,  the  ceoof  Vanderbilt

WASHINGTON, DC
America’s covid death rate has been nearly double that of other rich countries.
As the pandemic moves into a new phase, what are the lessons?


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