Pharmaceutical Market Europe • September • 13
POLICY AND PUBLIC HEALTH
The Americas have been ravaged by COVID-19 – here are some important lessons we have learned
It has been six long months. Excruciating and depressing. Horrific and unfathomable. The Americas (North, South and Central) have been utterly gutted by COVID-19. As of the middle of August, six of the top ten countries in total COVID-19 infections are in The Americas and they account for over 50% of worldwide infections as a group, despite representing less than 10% of the world’s population.
It has been six long months. Excruciating and depressing. Horrific and unfathomable. The Americas (North, South and Central) have been utterly gutted by COVID-19. As of the middle of August, six of the top ten countries in total COVID-19 infections are in The Americas and they account for over 50% of worldwide infections as a group, despite representing less than 10% of the world’s population.
The easy answer would be to blame populist leaders like Trump, Bolsinaro and López Obrador for the mess that The Americas are in. But that would belie larger problems that are not of their making. The more complicated answer would be to examine the way out of this pandemic through regional cooperation and a Pan-American approach of scientific and economic collaboration with public health imperatives to help frame decisions.
Instead, as we are in the early stages of what appears to be a protracted and drawn-out fight with this virus, it might be more useful to look at what we have learned (in no particular order) with almost virtual certainty through the accumulation of scientific evidence.
The reader should note some obvious things about this list. Firstly, it is not exhaustive by any means. We have learned a lot more than I could possibly squeeze into my monthly column. That this is not only a respiratory illness. That we need to pay attention to ventilation. That one single vaccine cannot possibly inoculate everyone and that we will likely need multiple vaccines. That asymptomatic spread is our worst nightmare. That this virus now appears to be airborne or aerosolised. Secondly, this list is not meant to be a retrospective analysis of what we did as a society to combat COVID-19. One day I hope to produce such a list. But for now, for this moment, these pearls of wisdom are about learning to adopt practices and attitudes that will get us through the next 12 months.
Rohit Khanna is the Managing Director of Catalytic Health, a healthcare communication, advertising & strategy agency. He can be reached at: rohit@catalytichealth.com