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New Senate report criticizes significant failures in initial federal COVID-19 response, pandemic preparedness

Following a two-year investigation by U.S. Sen. Gary Peters (D-MI), chairman of the Senate Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs Committee, a new report detailed significant failures in the federal government’s initial response to the COVID-19 pandemic and overall preparedness.

Released last week, the report covered the period from December 2019 to March 2020, when the coronavirus first began to spread throughout the U.S. and the world. Dozens of current and former senior officials responsible for coordination of the U.S. COVID-19 reactions were interviewed for “Historically Unprepared: Examination of the Federal Government’s Pandemic Preparedness and Initial COVID-19 Response.”

“The COVID-19 pandemic was an unprecedented public health crisis,” Peters said. “However, the loss of life, suffering, and economic devastation were not inevitable. My investigation found that long-term systemic failures left our nation unprepared to grapple with public health threats, and when the virus began to spread throughout the country – the federal government failed to act quickly and formulate a comprehensive response. These compounding failures, unfortunately, cost lives and livelihoods in Michigan and across the nation.”

The report did not place all the blame on one administration. Instead, it noted that the U.S. had failed to sufficiently invest in public health preparedness for many years – something health experts had sounded the alarm over for as long. Further, statutory authorities and policy directives that guide federal leadership during health emergencies were found to overlap and lack clarity, leaving responses muddled, while the well-documented hits to the supply chain showed the nation’s insufficient domestic manufacturing capacity for critical medical products.

Despite the historical capabilities of the medical and scientific fields in the United States, the report also noted that U.S. public health surveillance systems for monitoring and detecting emerging infectious diseases were not only fragmented but outdated and inadequate. If that wasn’t bad enough, communications surrounding the disease were inconsistent and, in many cases, contradictory, with the Trump administration notably trying to downplay the threat. Sluggishness at a time demanding decisive action also exacerbated matters.

While not the first public health crisis to face the country, Peters concluded that COVID-19 showed the need for change to prevent future crises from reaching the same scope. In his recommendations, he called for implementing sustained investments in public health preparedness and response across all levels of government, as well as sustainable domestic manufacturing capacity for critical medical products; clarifying agency roles in pandemic preparedness and response; standardizing health data collection for improved response; and building the infrastructure needed for testing surge capacity in critical moments.

Chris Galford

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