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- Jun 27, 2019
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Not keeping the statistics on home/original location seems so foolish to me. We learn from our mistakes as humans. We can track and prep for the next epidemic by learning how we failed. We can improve. I’m baffled by the leadership at all levels that doesn't recognize this fundamental truth. Our businesses, states and our country need to follow the abiding truths we already know.
Leaders don't stay in one job very long (unlike physicians and teachers and scientists). Many are elected, the rest are constantly on the hunt for better jobs. It takes real experience and expertise, over a long time, to know how to respond to an emergency.
"We" can improve, but only if we require people in charge to study the issues they oversee, get formal training in how to figure things out. It would not hurt us at all to have relevant leaders travel to places who handled this much better than we did.
Even if the current crop of decision-makers were to "learn" what to do, most of them are of an age where they will be out of the system in 5-10 years and the new person who gets the job may well come from a different region or walk of life - or be much younger and not able to apply their life experience (because right now, they're doing something completely different).
Unlike many nations, the US has a very fluid technological and political social structure. We need data, manuals, policies and planning. The public needs to push all its leaders to make this transparent. Of course, if people are more interested in just getting back to their regular lives, that's not going to happen.
I don't know what to say about Florida - that's a staggering number of nursing homes. California, with twice as many people, is predicted to have about 1500 deaths; Florida - almost 5000. I keep rereading that stat and refreshing pages and hoping my eyes are deceiving me.