Category: Covid-19

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WABE’s Week In Review: Georgia Shows Up At DNC, And COVID-19 Continues To Plague The State | 90.1 FM WABE – WABE 90.1 FM

August 22, 2020

The virtual Democratic National Convention this week saw a number of speakers with Georgia roots. Former President Jimmy Carter and former first lady Rosalynn Carter endorsed former Vice President Joe Biden, who accepted the nomination Thursday in a hope-driven 24-minute speech.

Biden must be our next president, said the 95-year-old Carter, Americas longest-living former president. Joe has the experience, character and decency to restore Americas greatness.

Atlanta Mayor Keisha Lance Bottoms spoke Thursday before Biden. She spoke of civil rights legends, like longtime Congressman John Lewis who died last month and received a tribute at the DNC. Bottoms said all those involved in the movement were vital. And for America to change, all its citizens have to vote.

Other well-known Georgians to speak at the event included former gubernatorial candidate Stacey Abrams, state Rep. Sam Park and Sally Yates, the first woman to serve as U.S. attorney for the Northern district of Georgia in Atlanta. She was fired by President Donald Trump after she refused to enforce his January 2017 travel ban on seven predominantly Muslim countries.

Virtual delegates

The streamed convention hosted delegates virtually, not on the convention floor as we are so used to seeing. Samuel Parker Short is a delegate representing Georgias 6th District at the Democratic National Convention. The teenager spoke with WABE about his experience.

More bad COVID-19 news in Georgia

Georgia has the highest rate of new coronavirus cases in the country, according to a new White House report, which was first reported by the Atlanta Journal-Constitution.

Gov. Brian Kemp is pushing back on that report. Kemp insists the state has made progress in slowing the spread of the coronavirus, but public health experts say those gains could easily disappear.

Gentrification during a pandemic in Atlanta

The COVID-19 economy has changed our world so very much. Theres a fear the pandemic could cause many to lose housing in the coming months. As people deal with unemployment, theyre struggling to pay rent and face the threat of eviction. In Atlanta, there are other forces causing displacement already, forces like new development and rising rents, which havent slowed during the pandemic.

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WABE's Week In Review: Georgia Shows Up At DNC, And COVID-19 Continues To Plague The State | 90.1 FM WABE - WABE 90.1 FM

3 deaths, 262 new cases of COVID-19 in ND for August 21; active cases statewide are 1,633 – KX NEWS

August 22, 2020

The North Dakota Department of Health Saturday morning has confirmed 262 new cases of COVID-19 in the state during testing August 21, bringing the total positives since testing began to 9,736.

The number of currently active COVID-19 cases in the state stands at 1,633 as of August 21.

Of the new positives, 48 were in Burleigh County and 12 were in Morton County. Both counties accounted for 22 percent of the new cases.

Williams County had 6, Stark County had 22 and Ward County had 19.

Three new deaths were reported: A woman in her 60s from Walsh County, A man in his 70s from Rolette County and a man in his 80s from Burleigh County.

All had underlying health conditions.

A total of 135 people have died so far in North Dakota as a result of COVID-19.

Of those, 108 are directly attributable to COVID-19 according to official death records. Another 15 deaths are where COVID-19 is not the primary cause of death. Nine death records are pending.

The health department reports 7,968 people are considered recovered from the 9,736 positive cases, an increase of 127 people from August 20.

This means there are actually 1,633 active COVID-19 cases in the state as of August 21.

Burleigh County has 403 active cases as of August 21, the most in the state and triple the number of active cases in Cass County (135). Morton County has 115 active cases.

Burleigh and Morton counties together account for 32 percent of all active COVID-19 cases as of August 20.

Stark County has 189, Ward County has 127 and Williams County has 35 active cases.

According to state health department numbers (which have been revised several times for specific dates), the statewide active cases first peaked on May 21 at 672 active cases, then began falling until they hit a low of 213 on June 22.

After that, the statewide active cases have once again been trending upward.

According to the numbers, 83 percent of those who have tested positive for COVID-19 in North Dakota to date have recovered from the virus.

The number of people reported recovered from COVID-19 on August 21 (127) is lower than the number of new COVID-19 cases reported that day (262).

53 people are currently hospitalized due to COVID-19 as of August 21, a decrease of 1 from August 20. A total of 499 hospitalizations have been reported since data tracking began.

COVID-19 cases have been reported in all 53 of North Dakotas counties.

Cass County (3,250 cases) and Grand Forks County (980 cases) account for 43 percent of all positive North Dakota COVID-19 cases to date. Cass County alone accounts for 34 percent of all positive cases.

Burleigh County (1,673 cases) and Morton County (529 cases) together account for 23 percent of all positive COVID-19 cases to date.

Williams County has 325 positive cases to date, Stark County has 513, Ward County has 381 and Mountrail County has 159.

Other county numbers are availablehere.

A total of 189,038 unique individual tests have been conducted to date, with 179,302 coming back negative for COVID-19, or roughly a 5 percent cumulative positive rate.

How is COVID-19 being spread in the state? Community spread (3,952 cases), close contact with exposed individuals (3,262 cases) and household contact (1,584 cases) are the top three reported.

While COVID-19 is seen as a virus that mostly impacts older people, in North Dakota, 58 percent of those testing positive for the virus are under 40.

Those in the 20 to 29 year age range have the most positive cases among those tested to date.

The health department is releasing test results daily around 11:00 a.m. The results cover all testing performed the previous day.

You can read more on the daily statistics as well as other COVID-19 information and resources at the North Dakota Department of Health websitehere.

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3 deaths, 262 new cases of COVID-19 in ND for August 21; active cases statewide are 1,633 - KX NEWS

Another HSU Student Tests Positive for COVID-19, University Says – Lost Coast Outpost

August 22, 2020

One additional HSU student resident has tested positive for COVID-19.

As of today, Humboldt State University has conducted more than 600 tests for nearly all students moving into campus residence halls. A small number of students have not yet arrived and are moving in over the next two days.

All five of the students with positive tests were asymptomatic. They had not shown symptoms or felt ill prior to traveling to this community.

The affected students have been moved to rooms on campus that are set aside for isolation. The University is providing ongoing support including health and wellness checks with the students, as well as delivery of meals and other necessities.

Comprehensive testing is continuing for all students living on campus this year. Campus residents will be tested multiple times during the course of a 14-day quarantine period. This enhanced level of testing is intended to identify those who may be asymptomatic and isolate them quickly, and was implemented late last week with the help of additional resources provided from the state and county.

In addition to the required testing for students living on campus, all other HSU students may opt to be tested at the Student Health Center and all students showing symptoms will be tested. Student-athletes are also being tested periodically per state requirements.

This advisory provides all the information the University will share about the cases.

The campus community is encouraged to stay safe and healthy, and to help protect the health of the community, by adhering to theSocial Responsibility Commitment. This includes wearing a face covering, maintaining social distancing, and staying at home if you are sick or have a fever.

The ongoing challenges of the pandemic can lead to increased stress and anxiety. Any students who would like to talk with a counselor can contact Counseling & Psychological Services at 707.826.3236. Staff or faculty needing additional support may call the Employee Assistance Program at 707.443.7358.

For more information about COVID-19, visit theCalifornia Department of Public Health website.

For more information about HSUs plans for the fall semester, visit theHSU Campus Ready website.

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Another HSU Student Tests Positive for COVID-19, University Says - Lost Coast Outpost

Regeneron partners with Roche to produce greater supply of its COVID-19 treatment – The Daily Gazette

August 22, 2020

EAST GREENBUSH Regeneron has teamed up with Swiss biotechnology giant Roche for development and distribution of the COVID-19 treatment that Regeneron is producing in its East Greenbush facility.

The deal is expected to more than triple the supply of REGN-COV2, an antibody cocktail now in clinical trials. Regeneron, which earlier this year landed a $450 million contract with the U.S. government for production of the compound, will distribute the treatment in the United States. Roche will distribute it abroad.

The deal commits both companies to dedicate portions of their resource capacity to manufacturing, and theyve already begun transferring the needed technology. Roche will be responsible for obtaining regulatory approvals outside the United States and for conducting any further research required to accomplish that.

The $450 million contract Regeneron announced in July is part of Operation Warp Speed, the public-private partnership created by the U.S. government in response to the pandemic, which has hit the United States harder than any other country.

The ultimate goal of Warp Speed is to create a vaccine, which would offer long-term infection prevention benefits. REGN-COV2 is not a vaccine but would offer shorter-term benefits with antibodies. The bodys immune system produces antibodies to fight infections; REGN-COV2 is designed to block COVID-19s ability to infect a person by usinga targeted and engineered mix of antibodies.

The cocktail is currently in the second of three phases of clinical trials for treatment of infection and the third phase of a trial for infection prevention.

Regeneron has progressed the REGN-COV2 research and development program at record speed and worked tirelessly to maximize our in-house manufacturing capacity, Dr. Leonard S. Schleifer, president and CEO of Regeneron, said in a news release Wednesday. This major collaboration with Roche provides important scale and global expertise to bring REGN-COV2 to many more patients in the United States and around the globe.

Regeneron is headquartered in Westchester County and has a large and growing production facility in East Greenbush.

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Regeneron partners with Roche to produce greater supply of its COVID-19 treatment - The Daily Gazette

What to Know About Wildfire Smoke and COVID-19 – UCSF News Services

August 22, 2020

Smoke rises from a wildfire burning in the Santa Cruz Mountains in California. Getty Images photo

Wildfires are again raging in California, but this years season began in a perfect storm of smoke from the blazes, a scorching heat wave, and the ongoing COVID-19 pandemic.

During a typical wildfire season, hospitals see more people coming in for respiratory issues, said Stephanie Christenson, MD, assistant professor of pulmonology at UC San Francisco. The worry this year is that the smoke from wildfires could increase the severity of COVID-19 symptoms.

Though there have yet to be studies looking specifically at the effect of wildfire smoke on COVID-19, there is preliminary research linking air pollution to increased COVID-19 susceptibility, severity and death, said Christenson.

With wildfire smoke, and air pollution generally, the most concerning are the microscopic particles that are about 2.5 microns in size (about 30 times smaller than the width of a human hair), which can be inhaled deep into the lungs, said John Balmes, MD, professor of medicine. There, these tiny toxins can injure the lining of the lungs, in a process known as oxidative stress, and cause airway inflammation.

People with certain chronic respiratory conditions, such as asthma, already have airway inflammation, and the added inflammation from wildfire smoke would be particularly harmful, said Balmes. There is no question that wildfire smoke can exacerbate these pre-existing conditions.

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Research also has shown that wildfire smoke raises the risk of lower respiratory tract infections such as acute bronchitis and pneumonia, by impairing the immune response, said Balmes. The immune cells, known as alveolar macrophages, that patrol our lower lungs are adept at engulfing and digesting foreign particles, such as bacteria. But when these macrophages engulf the combustion particles in wildfire smoke, they cannot digest them, and essentially are disabled from performing their role in the immune response.

Wildfire smoke, like COVID-19, can affect more than the lungs. A study from the 2015 wildfire season found that emergency room visits in areas most affected by smoke increased not only for respiratory complaints, but also cardiovascular and neurological complaints, such as stroke, said Jahan Fahimi, MD, PhD, an emergency care physician.

My advice to the public is that people should be sheltering in place as much as possible, said Balmes. Stay home with windows closed, ventilation turned to recirculate, and if possible, have a clean air room with a HEPA air purifying appliance.

To avoid COVID-19 exposure, its safest to stay home with the people you already live with, added Fahimi.

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As for masks, Balmes noted that N95 masks fitted tightly over the face offer the best protection against wildfire smoke particles, but that N95 masks with exhalation valves do not provide COVID-19 protection. He recommends covering the valve with tape or wearing a surgical mask over the N95.

Because N95 masks (without valves) should be reserved for health care workers treating COVID-19, experts do not suggest buying new N95 masks unless you need to be outside for an extended period of time.

Fahimi drew a parallel between wildfire smoke and the coronavirus that in both cases, the duration and dose of exposure determines risk. If youre only going to be out for 10 to 15 minutes, even no mask is fine for a short duration, he said. But people working outdoors, thats when you want a mask.

Surgical masks are more readily available and will provide some protection against wildfire smoke, said Balmes. Cloth masks likely provide little protection against PM2.5 particles, but are still essential for COVID-19 protection.

If you cant get a surgical or a N95 mask, wear a cloth mask because the most important thing is to protect others from the virus, said Balmes.

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What to Know About Wildfire Smoke and COVID-19 - UCSF News Services

Coronavirus in Tennessee: 1 Knox County commissioner tested positive for COVID-19, 2 others in quarantine – WATE 6 On Your Side

August 22, 2020

Tennessee Gov. Bill Lee talks about school reopening guidance and high school sports

Air travel not expected to recover until 2024

Fed wrestles with its next moves as virus stalls US economy

Dr. Deborah Birx urges Tennesseans to wear masks

Cocke County Schools delay start of fall semester

Oak Ridge Schools: Jefferson Middle staff member tests positive for COVID-19

Gov. Lee allows contact sports to resume

Local educators react to governor's recommendations for reopening schools

Ice Bears season start pushed back

ETSU releases fall semester plans

Survey shows more Knox County teachers prefer virtual class

Concerns remain for parents of special education students

Residents, staff test positive for COVID-19 at Oak Ridge senior living facility

Medic screening all donors for COVID-19 antibodies

University of Tennesse Athletic Director Phillip Fulmer says 'OK, team, were gonna win this one,'

Regal Cinemas new reopening date is Aug. 21

Sevier County schools to discuss reopening Monday

Pelosi: GOP in 'disarray' over COVID rescue bill

Positive COVID-19 case at Alcoa Middle School

McEnany: Schools, teachers considered 'essential'

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Coronavirus in Tennessee: 1 Knox County commissioner tested positive for COVID-19, 2 others in quarantine - WATE 6 On Your Side

48 new COVID-19 cases reported in Grays Harbor County in five days, death total up to five – The Daily World

August 22, 2020

The Grays Harbor County COVID-19 rate grew by 31 Wednesday and Thursday to 184, Grays Harbor Public Health reported Friday.

There were 16 news cases reported Friday, after 15 reported Thursday. The new case count Wednesday was three. Since Sunday, Aug. 16, there have been 48 positive COVID-19 tests reported in the county.

Public Health is now reporting five COVID-19-related deaths in the county, one in July and four in August, two of those reported Wednesday. No further details about the most recent deaths have been released by Public Health.

There are 56 active cases as of Friday, with six new contacts identified. Active cases are those those still under isolation or quarantine. Public Health said cases with improved symptoms are no longer active 10 days after their first symptoms began, or from their test date if they did not develop symptoms.

Contacts who do not develop symptoms are no longer active 14 days after their last exposure to a person confirmed to have a COVID-19 infection.

The 56 active cases are still under investigation. There have been 483 total contact investigations to date.

Of the total cases so far, the majority, 71, were reported in the 20-39-year-old age group, followed by 43 in the 40-59-year age range, 27 age 60-79 years, 17 in ages 1-19, and 10 in those aged 80 and older.

Confirmed cases include 87 females and 81 males.

In cases by race, there have been 123 among whites, 27 among Hispanics, six American Indian/Alaska Native, four Asian, four bi-racial, three black, and one Native Hawaiian or Pacific Islander. The county update by zip code map had not been updated by press time.

According to state Department of Health data, which Friday still had the case count at 165 and death count at 3, there are 18 current hospitalizations in Grays Harbor County.

Westport testing

Friday, Grays Harbor Public Health conducted two mass COVID-19 testing operations in Westport. Tests were conducted at the Alaskan Hotel and Washington Crab parking lot.

These tests are closed to the public and are for continual surveillance as part of COVID-19 outbreak investigations, said Public Health on its Facebook page Thursday. Calls to Public Health for more details about this mass testing effort were not immediately returned Friday.

Pacific County

There were a total of 58 COVID-19 cases in Pacific County as of Aug. 19, an increase of three cases from the previous weeks total of 55.

This is a sharp drop in the weekly number; the week of Aug. 5-12 saw an increase of a dozen cases.

For the week of Aug. 13-19, there were three active cases in the county being monitored by Public Health staff, and eight hospitalizations. Of the 58 cases, 54 were confirmed to be current residents of the county. According to Wednesdays numbers, there are 55 closed cases in the county.

One previous case was removed, according to Pacific County Emergency Management Director Scott McDougall: The individual being removed is incarcerated in a correctional facility and has not been in Pacific County during their illness.

The county is still reporting two deaths related to the virus, with one case still pending further investigation. As of Friday the county had eight hospitalizations related to the virus.

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48 new COVID-19 cases reported in Grays Harbor County in five days, death total up to five - The Daily World

How miscommunication and selfishness hampered Americas COVID-19 response – USA TODAY

August 20, 2020

New Zealand Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern says there's no "big surge" of COVID-19 cases in her country. Wochit

COVID-19 has scrambled the meaning of American exceptionalism.

For a century or more, the United States has been a beacon of hope and strength to the rest of the world. But its response to the pandemic, many public health experts say, has been uniquely hapless, ineffective, undisciplined and selfish. By some measures, the United States has handled the health crisis as badly as any country has.

Although the United States represents only 4% of the worlds population, it accounts for a quarter of all COVID-19 cases and 22% of all deaths.

The country whose military and economic might powered a victory in theSecond World War, and whose confidence and technological wizardry planted the first human being on the moon, now finds itself as a reverse role model during the worst public health crisis in a century.

The U.S. response I exaggerate not is a textbook example of how to do it wrong, said Dr. William Schaffner, an infectious disease specialist at Vanderbilt University Medical Center.

To be sure, some American states, particularly in New England, have fared better than others, but that only reflects the disjointed national response, epidemiologists say.

More:Read Pew/Statelinecoverage of the latest state action on coronavirus

People line-up to take a COVID-19 test in the Sunset Park neighborhood which had seen a spike in coronavirus cases in recent days on August 13, 2020 in New York City.(Photo: Spencer Platt, Getty Images)

Relatively successful countries such as Denmark, Germany, Senegal and Thailand have put out messaging that is clear, consistent and transparent. They have implemented nationwide policies guided by science rather than politics. And above all, they have exerted strong national leadership.

The first thing I would say is that they have had a national policy, Schaffner said. That is also the second, third and fourth thing. They had a national policy. That national policy was decided on very quickly and it was communicated clearly and consistently and based on public health principles.

How did the stock market hit a record amid COVID-19-fueled recession?Here's what experts say about the rebound

Community spirit has proven stronger elsewhere than in the United States, some health policy experts say.

One of the things that strikes me about the rest of the world compared to the U.S. is there is much more of a community sense, said Dr. Krutika Kuppalli, vice chair of the Infectious Diseases Society of Americas Global Health Committee and an infectious disease doctor who has worked in Asia and on Ebola in Africa. The U.S. is much more about I than we, whereas in other countries its more we than I.

In a pandemic, the thing has to be about we not I.

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Anna Petherick, a researcher at the School of Government at the University of Oxford, whichanalyzes government COVID-19 responses, said Americans show a lot of skepticism toward government directives.

There are good things about that attitude, but it doesnt serve the country well at a time of crisis when you need to coordinate, when you perhaps need to give up personal freedom for the collective good, she said.

South Korea and the United States both recorded their first cases Jan. 20, yet South Korea has held its outbreak level to 30 cases per 100,000 people, compared with the U.S. figure of 1,655 per 100,000.

Last week, New Zealand had gone 100 days without detecting a single example of community spread of the virus before encountering an outbreak that prompted the government to postpone the general election for a month. The United States surpassed 5 million cases and 160,000 dead around the same time, with cases mounting in six states and high transmission rates prevailing in more than a dozen others.

Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern speaks to media during a press conference at Parliament on August 17, 2020 in Wellington, New Zealand.(Photo: Hagen Hopkins, Getty Images)

Countries such as South Korea and Denmark have removed nearly all coronavirus-related restrictions. In the United States, authorities in numerous hotspots have either had to pause or roll back reopening some businesses. Hundreds of public health experts and medical professionals have signed on to a lettercalling for a national shutdownnow, in the sixth month of the pandemic.

If our response had been as effective as South Korea, Australia, or Singapores, fewer than 2,000 Americans would have died, their letter asserts. Wecould have prevented 99% of those COVID-19 deaths. But we didnt.

Last week, White House senior adviser Jared Kushner defended the Trump administrations strategy. In an interview with CNBC, he said the administration led by overseeing the procurement, production and distribution of masks, ventilators and other resources.

With regards to a national strategy, the job of the federal government was to get the resources that the country needed, said Kushner, who is also the presidents son-in-law.

You heard all these hysterical reports about doctors on the front lines not being able to get masks, not having enough ventilators, you had governors requesting a lot more ventilators than they needed, and again, every patient in America that needed a ventilator got a ventilator, President Trump distributed them properly."

COVID-19 hit Northeast states hard: Here's what they're doing to prepare for a surge

Foreign Policy Analytics, an independent research and advisory division of the journalForeign Policy, examined multiple metrics togauge the performanceof 36 nations in responding to COVID-19.

In addition to each countrys death rate and case rate, researchers considered the state of each nations public health system before the pandemic; the timeliness and stringency of its public health actions (such as closures, social distancing, testing and contact tracing); the consistency, effectiveness and transparency of its communications; primacy of science in guiding policy; and coronavirus-related stimulus spending and public health funding.

The United States is doing quite poorly, said Fouad Pervez, a senior policy analyst at Foreign Policy Analytics and lead researcher on the index.

Of the 36 countries, the index rated the United States 31st, ahead of only Indonesia, Turkey, Mexico, Iran and China, the last of which rated worst of all primarily because of its lack of economic intervention and poor transparency, including silencing doctors who raised early alarms about the virus.

New Zealand rated highest, followed by Senegal and Denmark. All received high marks for policy directives, economic support to prop up the public health system and mitigate financial harm to individuals and businesses, and consistent, clear, fact-based communications.

The index placed the United States around the median in its public policies, just above the median in its economic support and weak in its communications. The United States, the researchers commented, has engaged in misinformation as much as any country in the Index. On the other hand, the authors said, the U.S. has not limited press freedom in response to the pandemic, like China and Iran did.

Countries that have done well in containing the virus have not all adopted precisely the same measures.

New Zealand never pushed masks, said Jennifer Nuzzo, an epidemiologist with Johns Hopkins Universitys Center for Health Security.

Instead, she said, the island country succeeded through a large shutdown and contact tracing intensive enough to identify where most people got sick. Aiding the contact tracing was a requirement that people sign into businesses or restaurants they visited, making them easier to track down if infections were linked to those establishments.

Nuzzo said Taiwan, another island nation, also never needed to resort to a broad shutdown because it had enacted strong travel restrictions and a program of aggressive testing, contact tracing and isolation of those infected. Singapore also avoided large shutdowns until being blindsided, Nuzzo said, by an outbreak in dormitories housing migrant workers, a group that health authorities had not surveilled well.

In addition to strong testing and isolation, South Korea has been aggressive in using technology in contact tracing, Kuppalli said. The country not only uses GPS tracking on cellphones users cannot choose to opt out but contact tracers also use closed circuit surveillance and credit card activity to locate those potentially exposed, techniques likely to run into resistance in the United States.

Kuppalli, who testified before a congressional committee last month contrasting COVID-19 responses in the United States with other countries, praised Scotland for being hyper transparent about what steps it was taking and for the empathy shown by health authorities.

They have put out the messaging that everybody matters in the country, and were going to take care of you, Kuppalli said.

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Scotland had a broad shutdown and reopened businesses slowly, explaining all along how it was proceeding and why, Kuppalli said. Countries that followed that course hadfar fewer cases per capitawhen they loosened restrictions than the United States did when states began easing rules.

The other countries did not open until they had the virus under control in terms of having either a low number of cases or they were fully on top of their cases in terms of testing, contact tracing and quarantining, said Luisa Franzini, chair of health policy and managementat the University of Maryland School of Public Health.

In the United States, some states decided to reopen when cases were not even going down, when they were still going up. With cases getting worse, they just doubled down and began reopening anyway.

Some epidemiologists pointed out that successful countries had national strategies as opposed to the American, state-by-state approach. Adopting measures that change at state boundaries might make sense with determining speed limits, but not with communicable disease.

A virus doesnt know boundaries of different jurisdictions, Franzini said. A state with strict lockdown orders cant protect itself from travelers from states with loose restrictions bringing the virus with them, she said, so a haphazard approach doesnt make sense.

That disjointedness has prompted some states, including New York and New Jersey, to require visitors from hotspot states to quarantine.

Public health experts say some of the successful countries had some experiential advantages when COVID-19 struck.

In contrast with the United States, people, particularly in South Asia, recalled the fear and the risk involved with failing to respond to SARS and MERS, said Dr. Jon Andrus, an epidemiologist and former deputy director of the Pan American Health Organization. They remember and built on their response. It didnt dissipate like it does in the United States, where we have a crisis and then we calm down and forget until the next crisis.

In a number of those Asian countries, the population was already used to wearing masks, Andrus said. But the mask-wearing, he said, symbolized something greater than a public health measure.

There is a lot of misinformation out there about coronavirus. We sort the facts from falsehoods. Wochit

Theres an acceptance of actions to keep my community safe above any ill-informed personal-freedom approach, Andrus said.

That attitude is not widely accepted in the United States, Andrus said, and the rest of the world is noticing.

My friends overseas see American exceptionalism as selfishness, he said.

Statelineis a nonpartisan, nonprofit news service of the Pew Charitable Trusts that provides daily reporting and analysis on trends in state policy.

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How miscommunication and selfishness hampered Americas COVID-19 response - USA TODAY

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