• =?UTF-8?Q?China=E2=80=99s_Zero=2DCovid_Policy_Is_a_Pandemic_Waiting_to?

    From David P.@21:1/5 to All on Wed Jan 26 22:54:22 2022
    China’s Zero-Covid Policy Is a Pandemic Waiting to Happen
    By Emanuel & Osterholm, 1/25/22, New York Times

    We can begin to see the future in many Chinese cities, most
    prominently in Xi’an, more than 600 miles from Beijing. Last month,
    the govt locked down Xi’an’s 13 million residents in response to
    a relatively small outbreak of the Delta variant, which is less
    transmissible than Omicron. This strict lockdown lasted about
    3 weeks. There also has been spread in Tianjin, a city near
    Beijing. Alarmingly, epidemiological research on a sizable number
    of the people infected with Omicron in Tianjin found that about
    95% of them had been fully vaccinated with the Chinese vaccines.
    And on Jan. 15, Chinese officials said Beijing’s first case of
    the Omicron variant had been found, leading to a localized
    lockdown and mass testing.

    This spread is most likely sending shudders thru President Xi &
    the Chinese leadership. Reflexively, they are likely to clamp
    down harder. But a zero-Covid policy means the Chinese will
    always be chasing an ever moving target. And they'll never win.

    Inevitably this'll have serious economic impacts for China — &
    for all of us, given the country’s position in the world economy.
    While China remains the production capital of the world, this is
    unlikely to be sustainable should lockdowns ensue. Businesses
    outside of China are likely to become increasingly hesitant to
    partner with Chinese ventures when they're unable to enter the
    country to meet partners & inspect factories that face unpredict-
    able closings. Declines in Chinese production would upend supply
    chains and the availability of goods everywhere, including in the
    United States.

    Other countries can provide a road map that China can put into
    action. Denmark, Germany and some other Euro countries, as well
    as Australia, have achieved strong immunity without suffering
    the U.S. death rate. They used effective vaccines, made smarter
    decisions about when and where to impose lockdowns and protected
    the most vulnerable — older people and those with compromised
    immune systems. Community spread resulted, but it would have
    been inevitable, even with longer or more severe lockdowns,
    and it allowed those countries to build up immunity.

    China’s elaborate containment efforts planned for the Olympics
    may prevent a Covid outbreak — and we certainly hope that is the
    case. But a zero-Covid policy is a losing long-term strategy.

    Ezekiel J. Emanuel is a physician, vice provost for global
    initiatives and a prof of medical ethics and health policy at the
    U. of Pennsylvania. Michael T. Osterholm is an epidemiologist &
    director of the Center for Infectious Disease Research & Policy
    at the U. of Minnesota.

    https://www.nytimes.com/2022/01/25/opinion/china-covid-19.html

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From paul polikos@21:1/5 to David P. on Thu Jan 27 17:59:45 2022
    On Thursday, January 27, 2022 at 6:54:23 AM UTC, David P. wrote:
    China’s Zero-Covid Policy Is a Pandemic Waiting to Happen
    By Emanuel & Osterholm, 1/25/22, New York Times

    We can begin to see the future in many Chinese cities, most
    prominently in Xi’an, more than 600 miles from Beijing. Last month,
    the govt locked down Xi’an’s 13 million residents in response to
    a relatively small outbreak of the Delta variant, which is less transmissible than Omicron. This strict lockdown lasted about
    3 weeks. There also has been spread in Tianjin, a city near
    Beijing. Alarmingly, epidemiological research on a sizable number
    of the people infected with Omicron in Tianjin found that about
    95% of them had been fully vaccinated with the Chinese vaccines.
    And on Jan. 15, Chinese officials said Beijing’s first case of
    the Omicron variant had been found, leading to a localized
    lockdown and mass testing.

    This spread is most likely sending shudders thru President Xi &
    the Chinese leadership. Reflexively, they are likely to clamp
    down harder. But a zero-Covid policy means the Chinese will
    always be chasing an ever moving target. And they'll never win.

    Inevitably this'll have serious economic impacts for China — &
    for all of us, given the country’s position in the world economy.
    While China remains the production capital of the world, this is
    unlikely to be sustainable should lockdowns ensue. Businesses
    outside of China are likely to become increasingly hesitant to
    partner with Chinese ventures when they're unable to enter the
    country to meet partners & inspect factories that face unpredict-
    able closings. Declines in Chinese production would upend supply
    chains and the availability of goods everywhere, including in the
    United States.

    Other countries can provide a road map that China can put into
    action. Denmark, Germany and some other Euro countries, as well
    as Australia, have achieved strong immunity without suffering
    the U.S. death rate. They used effective vaccines, made smarter
    decisions about when and where to impose lockdowns and protected
    the most vulnerable — older people and those with compromised
    immune systems. Community spread resulted, but it would have
    been inevitable, even with longer or more severe lockdowns,
    and it allowed those countries to build up immunity.

    China’s elaborate containment efforts planned for the Olympics
    may prevent a Covid outbreak — and we certainly hope that is the
    case. But a zero-Covid policy is a losing long-term strategy.

    Ezekiel J. Emanuel is a physician, vice provost for global
    initiatives and a prof of medical ethics and health policy at the
    U. of Pennsylvania. Michael T. Osterholm is an epidemiologist &
    director of the Center for Infectious Disease Research & Policy
    at the U. of Minnesota.

    https://www.nytimes.com/2022/01/25/opinion/china-covid-19.html

    While China’s Zero-Covid Policy Is a Pandemic Waiting to Happen, US's policy is a pandemic happening wave after wave, with no end in sight.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)