Lessons from the COVID war An investigative report

Book - 2023

Our national leaders have drifted into treating the pandemic as though it were an unavoidable natural catastrophe, repeating a depressing cycle of panic followed by neglect. So a remarkable group of practitioners and scholars from many backgrounds came together determined to discover and learn lessons from this latest world war.

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Subjects
Genres
Popular works
Published
New York : PublicAffairs 2023.
Language
English
Corporate Author
Covid Crisis Group
Corporate Author
Covid Crisis Group (author)
Edition
First edition
Item Description
"A joint effort from: Danielle Allen, John M. Barry, John Bridgeland, Michael Callahan, Nicholas A. Christakis , Doug Criscitello, Charity Dean, Victor Dzau, Gary Edson, Ezekiel Emanuel, Ruth Faden, Baruch Fischhoff, Margaret "Peggy" Hamburg, Melissa Harvey, Richard Hatchett, David Heymann, Kendall Hoyt , Andrew Kilianski, James Lawler, Alexander J. Lazar, James Le Duc, Marc Lipsitch, Anup Malani, Monique K. Mansoura, Mark McClellan, Carter Mecher, Michael Osterholm, David A. Relman, Robert Rodriguez, Carl Schramm, Emily Silverman, Kristin Urquiza, Rajeev Venkayya, Philip Zelikow"--Back cover.
Physical Description
347 pages : illustrations ; 21 cm
Bibliography
Includes bibliographical references (pages 302-326) and index.
ISBN
9781541703803
  • 1. From Tragedy to Possibility
  • 2. Origins, Prevention, and Warning
  • 3. The Defenders
  • 4. Containment Fails; Mobilization Lags
  • 5. Federal Crisis Management Collapses; Operation Warp Speed Begins
  • 6. Communities Improvise with Few Tools
  • 7. The Healthcare System Frays
  • 8. Trust and Confidence Break Down
  • 9. Fighting Back with Drugs and Vaccines
  • 10. Strategy for a Global War
  • 11. America the Competent?
  • List of Acronyms
  • About the Covid Crisis Group
  • Sources
  • Notes
  • Index
Review by Kirkus Book Review

A hard look at widespread failed governance during a global pandemic. The Trump administration's dismal response to the Covid-19 pandemic has been reported in numerous books and articles. The findings presented in this riveting analysis synthesize and go far beyond that material. The 34 members of the Covid Crisis Group, directed by Philip Zelikow, former executive director of the 9/11 Commission, and including prominent scientists, scholars, physicians, and public health experts, conducted 195 listening sessions with more than 270 participants, representing a broad range of expertise. Also drawing on their own background research, they offer an authoritative assessment of "the world war" against Covid-19, particularly in America. "No country's performance," they have found, "is more disappointing than that of the United States." Although they agree that Trump "was a comorbidity" in the fight, his incompetence was not the only obstacle. The nation, they assert, "faced a twenty-first-century challenge with a system designed for nineteenth-century threats." At the federal level, "confusion and friction" in myriad departments obscured "who was in charge of what problems." Action plans emerged as "a jargon laden catalog of problems" and "statements of goals," with "little in it about what people would actually do." When the Trump administration threw responsibility to the states, it fell onto "a patchwork quilt of decentralized, detached, autonomous, and often contradictory operation plans and policies." The nation sorely lacked a network of biomedical surveillance, which would have tracked the progress of the outbreak, testing results, and treatment protocols. Compared with Germany and South Korea, the U.S. evinced "splintered crisis management." As the contributors clearly show, "what the Covid war exposed, what every recent crisis has exposed--even in Iraq and Afghanistan--is the erosion of operational capabilities in much of American civilian governance." Crafting a system of national health security is crucial, where executive leadership is "aided by a much stronger core of trained, deployable public health regulars." An urgent, meticulously documented argument for better preparedness in future crises. Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.