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When is a pandemic over?

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    Consider this unfortunately
    familiar scenario.
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    Several months ago a highly infectious,
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    sometimes deadly respiratory virus
    infected humans for the first time.
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    It then proliferated faster than public
    health measures could contain it.
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    Now the WHO has declared a pandemic,
    meaning that it’s spreading worldwide.
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    The death toll is starting to rise and
    everyone is asking the same question:
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    when will the pandemic end?
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    The WHO will likely declare the pandemic
    over
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    once the infection is mostly contained
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    and rates of transmission drop
    significantly throughout the world.
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    But exactly when that happens depends on
    what global governments choose to do next.
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    They have three main options:
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    Race through it, Delay and Vaccinate,
    or Coordinate and Crush.
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    One is widely considered best, and
    it may not be the one you think.
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    In the first, governments and communities
    do nothing to halt the spread
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    and instead allow people to be exposed
    as quickly as possible.
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    Without time to study the virus,
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    doctors know little about how to
    save their patients,
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    and hospitals reach peak capacity
    almost immediately.
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    Somewhere in the range of millions
    to hundreds of millions of people die,
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    either from the virus or the collapse
    of health care systems.
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    Soon the majority of people have been
    infected and either perished or survived
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    by building up their immune responses.
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    Around this point herd immunity kicks in,
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    where the virus can no longer
    find new hosts.
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    So the pandemic fizzles out a short
    time after it began.
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    But there’s another way to create herd
    immunity without such a high cost of life.
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    Let’s reset the clock to the moment the
    WHO declared the pandemic.
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    This time, governments and communities
    around the world
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    slow the spread of the virus to give
    research facilities time
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    to produce a vaccine.
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    They buy this crucial time through tactics
    that may include widespread testing
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    to identify carriers,
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    quarantining the infected and people
    they’ve interacted with,
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    and physical distancing.
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    Even with these measures in place,
    the virus slowly spreads,
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    causing up to hundreds of thousands
    of deaths.
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    Some cities get the outbreak under control
    and go back to business as usual,
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    only to have a resurgence
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    and return to physical distancing when
    a new case passes through.
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    Within the next several years,
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    one or possibly several vaccines become
    widely, and hopefully freely, available
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    thanks to a worldwide effort.
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    Once 40-90% of the population
    has received it—
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    the precise amount varying
    based on the virus—
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    herd immunity kicks in, and the
    pandemic fizzles out.
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    Let’s rewind the clock one more time,
    to consider the final strategy:
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    Coordinate and Crush.
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    The idea here is to simultaneously starve
    the virus, everywhere,
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    through a combination of quarantine,
    social distancing, and restricting travel.
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    The critical factor is to synchronize
    responses.
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    In a typical pandemic, when one
    country is peaking,
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    another may be getting its first cases.
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    Instead of every leader responding to
    what’s happening in their jurisdiction,
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    here everyone must treat the world as the
    giant interconnected system it is.
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    If coordinated properly, this could end a
    pandemic in just a few months,
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    with low loss of life.
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    But unless the virus is completely
    eradicated—which is highly unlikely—
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    there will be risks of it escalating to
    pandemic levels once again.
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    And factors like animals carrying and
    transmitting the virus
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    might undermine our best
    efforts altogether.
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    So which strategy is best for this deadly,
    infectious respiratory virus?
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    Racing through it is a quick fix, but
    would be a global catastrophe,
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    and may not work at all if people can
    be reinfected.
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    Crushing the virus through Coordination
    alone is also enticing for its speed,
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    but only reliable with true and nearly
    impossible global cooperation.
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    That’s why vaccination, assisted by as
    much global coordination as possible,
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    is generally considered to be the winner;
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    it’s the slow, steady, and proven
    option in the race.
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    Even if the pandemic officially ends
    before a vaccine is ready,
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    the virus may reappear seasonally, so
    vaccines will continue to protect people.
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    And although it may take years to create,
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    disruptions to most people’s lives
    won’t necessarily last the full duration.
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    Breakthroughs in treatment and
    prevention of symptoms
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    can make viruses much less dangerous,
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    and therefore require less extreme
    containment measures.
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    Take heart: the pandemic will end.
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    Its legacy will be long-lasting,
    but not all bad;
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    the breakthroughs, social services,
    and systems we develop
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    can be used to the betterment of everyone.
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    And if we take inspiration from the
    successes and lessons from the failures,
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    we can keep the next potential pandemic
    so contained
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    that our children’s children won’t
    even know its name.
Title:
When is a pandemic over?
Speaker:
Alex Rosenthal
Description:

more » « less
Video Language:
English
Team:
closed TED
Project:
TED-Ed
Duration:
05:35
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