We Are Not Going Back To Normal
Ultimately,
however, I predict that we’ll restore the ability to socialize safely by
developing more sophisticated ways to identify who is a disease risk
and who isn’t, and discriminating—legally—against those who are.
Tech Policy
We’re not going back to normal
Social distancing is here to stay for much more than a few weeks. It will upend our way of life, in some ways forever.
To
stop coronavirus we will need to radically change almost everything we
do: how we work, exercise, socialize, shop, manage our health, educate
our kids, take care of family members.
We
all want things to go back to normal quickly. But what most of us have
probably not yet realized—yet will soon—is that things won’t go back to
normal after a few weeks, or even a few months. Some things never will.
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It’s now widely agreed (even by Britain, finally) that every country needs to “flatten the curve”: impose social distancing
to slow the spread of the virus so that the number of people sick at
once doesn’t cause the health-care system to collapse, as it is
threatening to do in Italy right now. That means the pandemic needs to
last, at a low level, until either enough people have had Covid-19 to
leave most immune (assuming immunity lasts for years, which we don’t know) or there’s a vaccine.
How
long would that take, and how draconian do social restrictions need to
be? Yesterday President Donald Trump, announcing new guidelines such as a
10-person limit on gatherings, said that “with several weeks of focused
action, we can turn the corner and turn it quickly.” In China, six
weeks of lockdown are beginning to ease now that new cases have fallen to a trickle.
But
it won’t end there. As long as someone in the world has the virus,
breakouts can and will keep recurring without stringent controls to
contain them. In a report yesterday
(pdf), researchers at Imperial College London proposed a way of doing
this: impose more extreme social distancing measures every time
admissions to intensive care units (ICUs) start to spike, and relax them
each time admissions fall. Here’s how that looks in a graph.
The
orange line is ICU admissions. Each time they rise above a
threshold—say, 100 per week—the country would close all schools and most
universities and adopt social distancing. When they drop below 50,
those measures would be lifted, but people with symptoms or whose family
members have symptoms would still be confined at home.
What
counts as “social distancing”? The researchers define it as “All
households reduce contact outside household, school or workplace by
75%.” That doesn’t mean you get to go out with your friends once a week
instead of four times. It means everyone does everything they can to
minimize social contact, and overall, the number of contacts falls by
75%.
Under
this model, the researchers conclude, social distancing and school
closures would need to be in force some two-thirds of the time—roughly
two months on and one month off—until a vaccine is available, which will
take at least 18 months (if it works at all). They note that the results are “qualitatively similar for the US.”
Eighteen months!? Surely there must be other solutions. Why not just build more ICUs and treat more people at once, for example?
Well,
in the researchers’ model, that didn’t solve the problem. Without
social distancing of the whole population, they found, even the best
mitigation strategy—which means isolation or quarantine of the sick, the
old, and those who have been exposed, plus school closures—would still
lead to a surge of critically ill people eight times bigger
than the US or UK system can cope with. (That’s the lowest, blue curve
in the graph below; the flat red line is the current number of ICU
beds.) Even if you set factories to churn out beds and ventilators and
all the other facilities and supplies, you’d still need far more nurses
and doctors to take care of everyone.
We’ll adapt to and
accept such measures, much as we’ve adapted to increasingly stringent
airport security screenings in the wake of terrorist attacks. The
intrusive surveillance will be considered a small price to pay for the
basic freedom to be with other people.
As
usual, however, the true cost will be borne by the poorest and weakest.
People with less access to health care, or who live in more
disease-prone areas, will now also be more frequently shut out of places
and opportunities open to everyone else. Gig workers—from drivers to
plumbers to freelance yoga instructors—will see their jobs become even
more precarious. Immigrants, refugees, the undocumented, and ex-convicts
will face yet another obstacle to gaining a foothold in society.
Moreover, unless
there are strict rules on how someone’s risk for disease is assessed,
governments or companies could choose any criteria—you’re high-risk if
you earn less than $50,000 a year, are in a family of more than six
people, and live in certain parts of the country, for example. That
creates scope for algorithmic bias and hidden discrimination, as
happened last year with an algorithm used by US health insurers that
turned out to inadvertently favor white people.
The world has changed many times, and it is
changing again. All of us will have to adapt to a new way of living,
working, and forging relationships. But as with all change, there will
be some who lose more than most, and they will be the ones who have lost
far too much already. The best we can hope for is that the depth of
this crisis will finally force countries—the US, in particular—to fix
the yawning social inequities that make large swaths of their populations so intensely vulnerable.
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60 Minutes - Swine Flu
1976 - could still vaccine companies!
That ended in 1986!
Do you trust your government?
That ended in 1986!
Do you trust your government?
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