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How to quickly scale up contact tracing across the US

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    Chris Anderson: Joia,
    both you and Partners In Health
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    have spent decades
    in various battlegrounds,
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    battling epidemics.
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    Perhaps, for context, you could give us
    a couple examples of that work.
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    Joia Mukherjee: Yeah,
    so Partners In Health
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    is a global nonprofit
    that is more than 30 years old.
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    We started famously in Haiti
    in a squatter settlement,
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    people who were displaced.
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    And when we talked to them,
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    they wanted health care and education,
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    houses, jobs.
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    And that has informed our work,
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    that proximity to people
    who are suffering.
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    When you think about
    health care and the poor,
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    there is always disproportionate suffering
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    for people who have been
    historically marginalized,
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    like our communities
    that we serve in Haiti.
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    And so we've always tried
    to provide health care
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    for the poorest people on earth.
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    And we were launched
    into an international dialogue
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    about whether that was possible
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    for drug-resistant tuberculosis, for HIV.
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    Indeed, for surgery, for cancer,
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    for mental health,
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    for noncommunicable diseases.
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    And we believe it's possible,
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    and it is part of the basic
    human right to care.
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    So when COVID started,
    we saw this immediately as a threat
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    to the health of people
    who were the poorest.
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    And Partners In Health
    now works in 11 countries,
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    five on the African continent,
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    Latin America and the Caribbean,
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    as well as the former Soviet Union.
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    And we immediately prepared
    to scale up testing,
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    contact tracing, treatment, care,
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    and then saw that it wasn't being done
    in the United States in that way.
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    And in fact, we were just sitting,
    passively waiting for people to get sick
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    and treat them in hospital.
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    And that message got
    to the governor of Massachusetts,
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    and we started supporting the state
    to do contact tracing for COVID,
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    with the very idea that this would help us
    identify and resource
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    the communities that were most vulnerable.
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    CA: So it's really quite ironic
    that these decades of experience
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    in the developing world and elsewhere,
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    that that has now really been seen
    as a crucial need to bring to the US.
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    And especially to bring your expertise
    around contact tracing.
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    So, talk a bit about contact tracing,
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    why does it matter so much,
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    and what would, I don't know,
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    a perfect contact tracing setup look like?
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    JM: Well, first I want to say
    that you want to, always,
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    in any type of illness,
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    you want to do prevention,
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    and diagnosis and treatment and care.
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    That is what comprehensive
    approaches look like,
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    and that "care" piece, to us,
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    is about the provision of social support
    and material support
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    to allow people to get the care they need.
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    So that might be transportation,
    it might be food.
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    So when you look
    at that comprehensive approach,
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    for an infectious disease,
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    part of prevention is knowing
    where the disease is spreading
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    and how it's spreading
    and in whom it's spreading,
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    so that resources can be
    disproportionately put
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    to the highest-risk areas.
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    So contact tracing
    is a staple of public health
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    and what it means is that every time
    a new person is diagnosed
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    with COVID or any infectious disease,
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    then you investigate and innumerate
    the people they've been in contacts with,
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    and call those contacts
    and say, "You've been exposed,"
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    or talk to them, "You've been exposed,
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    these are the things you need to know.
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    First of all, how are you?
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    Do you need care yourself?"
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    And facilitating that.
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    "Second of all, these are the information
    you need to know to keep yourself safe.
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    About quarantine, about prevention."
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    And again, this would be
    with any infectious disease,
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    from Ebola, to cholera, to a sexually
    transmitted disease like HIV.
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    And then we say,
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    "OK, knowing what you know,
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    do you have the means
    to protect yourself?"
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    Because often the most vulnerable
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    do not have the means
    to protect themselves.
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    So that is also where this resource
    component comes in
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    and where equity is so critical
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    to making this disease stop
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    and also getting the information
    and the resources
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    to people who need them the most.
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    CA: And in a pandemic,
    the people who need them the most,
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    the most vulnerable, as you say,
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    are probably also --
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    That's where the disease
    is spreading a lot.
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    It's in everyone's interest to do this.
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    You're not just making this sort of,
    wonderful, equity moral point
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    that we've got to help these people.
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    It's actually in all
    of our interest, right?
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    JM: Yes.
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    Yes, we are one humanity,
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    and any disease, any infectious
    disease that is spreading
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    is a threat to all of us.
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    And that is one of the pieces,
    there's the moral imperative,
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    there is the epidemiologic imperative,
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    that if you can't control
    these diseases everywhere,
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    that it's a threat anywhere.
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    And so as we look to the kind
    of society we want to live in,
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    good health is something that gives us all
    so much return on our investment.
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    CA: Now, some countries were able
    to use contact tracing
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    almost to shut down the pandemic
    before it took off in that country.
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    The US was unable to do that,
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    and some people have taken the view
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    that therefore, contact tracing
    became irrelevant,
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    that the strategy was mitigation,
    shut everything down.
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    You've argued against that,
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    that even in a process of lockdown
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    that actually contact tracing
    plays a key role.
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    Help us understand the scale,
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    when there's a lot of cases,
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    the scale of tracing, both cases
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    and everyone they may
    have been in contact with
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    and their contacts.
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    It quickly gets to a huge problem.
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    JM: It's massive.
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    CA: What sort of workforce do you need
    to make a difference
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    at this moment, where the US is at?
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    JM: It's massive.
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    I mean, the scale is massive,
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    and we should not take that lightly.
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    And we don't, at Partners In Health.
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    I mean, we are willing
    to try to figure this out,
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    and I always feel
    that if we could stop Ebola
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    in some of the poorest
    countries in the world,
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    of course we ought to do it here,
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    and was it too late when there were
    28,000 deaths in Ebola?
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    Sure, it's always too late.
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    We should have started earlier,
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    but it's not too late to have an impact.
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    And so there's three aspects
    of timing and scale.
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    First is, the earlier you start,
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    the better, right?
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    And that's what we saw in Rwanda.
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    They went from early testing
    and contact tracing,
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    the first two cases entered
    into the country on March 15,
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    and in one month,
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    because of contact tracing,
    isolation and plenty of testing,
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    they had held that case rate
    to 134 people.
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    It's remarkable, it's remarkable.
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    In the state of Georgia,
    where is home to the CDC,
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    similar population size, about 12 million,
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    from the first two cases
    in the first month,
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    those cases became 4,400 cases.
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    And in the country of Belgium,
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    a similar population,
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    those two cases became 7,400.
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    So you do have to make scale to stop this.
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    But the earlier you do it,
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    the more benefits there are
    to your society
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    and also to the other people
    who need medical services --
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    women who are pregnant,
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    people who need their fracture repaired,
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    because services themselves
    in the United States
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    have been, you know, really hampered
    by this huge amount of COVID.
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    So the first point is,
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    it's always late, but it's never too late.
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    Why?
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    Because vulnerable populations
    are sitting ducks,
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    and so imagine if one of your contacts
    was a nursing assistant
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    who worked in a nursing home.
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    We know that one nursing assistant
    can spread it throughout a nursing home.
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    And is it important to identify
    that person as a contact
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    and assure that he or she
    is able to remain quarantined?
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    That is critical.
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    And so it's hard to say,
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    "Well, it's not worth it
    if it's just one person, two persons."
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    Every life matters,
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    and all of their contacts in the community
    of that person matters as well.
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    So that's one thing.
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    The second about scale
    is people need jobs right now.
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    And they want to be part of a solution,
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    and some of the frustration we see,
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    the antilockdown movement,
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    is really out of anger and frustration
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    and feeling, "What can we do?"
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    And so this gives people this feeling
    that they're part of a solution
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    and can provide thousands of jobs.
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    And then third, I would say,
    for us to reopen our schools,
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    our churches, our workplaces,
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    we have to know
    where the virus is spreading
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    so that we don't just
    continue on this path.
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    And so contact tracing provides
    the platform to control,
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    but also to see outbreaks
    in real time popping up,
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    and then respond promptly.
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    So there are many reasons
    that we have to bring this to scale now.
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    Even though it is tardy.
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    CA: So especially as we have
    this pressure to go back to work,
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    like, contact tracing
    has to be part of that strategy,
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    or we're just inviting another disaster
    in a few weeks' time.
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    Whatever you make of what's happened
    during this mitigation process.
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    JM: Exactly, exactly.
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    Exactly, and so that's such
    an important part, Chris,
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    and something that we are just really keen
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    to look at the United States
    in a different way.
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    What are the long-term
    public health infrastructures
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    that we need to protect us
    for the second wave, the third wave
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    and in the future, for future pandemics?
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    CA: Whitney.
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    Whitney Pennington Rodgers:
    You know, to that point,
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    there is a question out there
    from one of our anonymous
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    community members,
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    about why contact tracing isn't already
    part of our public health system.
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    It seems like it does make a lot of sense
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    its a way to mitigate
    the spread of disease.
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    Could you speak a little bit to that?
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    JM: I think many people have said --
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    and I am not a politician --
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    that our American
    health care infrastructure
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    is built on treatment and not prevention.
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    It's built on procedures
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    and not keeping people well.
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    And some of that was driven by profit,
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    and some of that was driven by need,
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    but I think we need to rethink
    how we deliver care in this environment.
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    WPR: "There is some fear and suspicion
    about privacy and contact tracing.
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    How can we build trust in the process?"
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    JM: Yeah, that's a great question,
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    and I think there's fear about privacy
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    and part of it comes from the idea
    of what contact tracing is.
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    And I think that's why we feel strongly,
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    is if you lead with the idea
    that it's care
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    and it's trying to get
    resources and information
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    and help to people,
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    it seems very different
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    than just, oh, who's sick,
    and who's a threat.
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    And so fundamentally --
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    and that's why we're so pleased
    to be at this TED talk today --
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    is it's about communication, right?
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    It's not about surveillance,
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    it's about communication
    and care and support.
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    That's one thing.
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    And we'll be hearing from our colleagues
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    on the tech side.
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    There's ways to add tech, even to care,
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    that it can be a resource
    for caring and communication.
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    But there are ways
    to protect people's privacy
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    and also to provide care,
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    and public health has many
    laws attached to it.
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    This is all done within the constructs
    of our state public health laws.
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    And so I think some
    of the communication around this is,
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    how do we take care of each other,
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    how do we take care
    of the most vulnerable.
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    And if we frame contact tracing as care,
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    I think that starts
    a different kind of conversation.
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    CA: Mm.
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    So, Joia, can you just talk
    in a bit more detail
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    about what it is that you are advising
    Massachusetts to do
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    in terms of contact tracing.
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    Give us a sense of the scale of it.
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    JM: Yeah, so the scale -- thank you.
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    You know, we are able now
    to make about 10,000 calls a day
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    to contacts.
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    So every new case that comes in,
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    the case is investigated
    by someone on the phone,
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    and then those investigations
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    means writing down the names
    and the phone numbers of the persons
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    you've been in contact with
    for the time you were sick
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    and a couple days before.
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    And with those numbers then,
    the contact tracers --
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    And that's what we really redoubled
    the workforce and really expanded,
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    more than doubled,
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    to support the department of public health
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    to do that contact tracing.
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    So we have 1,700 people employed
    full time, with benefits,
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    to call those contacts
    and say, "Are you OK?
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    This is the information you need,"
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    and then, and I think
    this is the critical piece,
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    when someone doesn't have the information,
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    then we have another cadre of people
    we call the resource care coordinators,
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    who help that person, that contact,
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    to do the things they need to do
    to protect themselves.
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    It might be food delivery,
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    it might be filing
    for unemployment benefits,
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    it might be trying to get them
    medical care or a test.
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    That piece is the care piece.
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    And that is what turns social distancing
    from very regressive --
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    look at me in my beautiful house,
    social distancing --
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    to something that's progressive
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    and paying attention
    to those who need the resources.
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    So the scale is massive,
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    with 1,700 employees hired to do this,
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    but they are connected
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    with local community food banks
    and churches and facilities
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    and primary health care centers as well.
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    CA: Thank you so much, Joia.
Title:
How to quickly scale up contact tracing across the US
Speaker:
Joia Mukherjee, Chris Anderson, Whitney Pennington Rodgers
Description:

more » « less
Video Language:
English
Team:
closed TED
Project:
TEDTalks
Duration:
15:17

English subtitles

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