Advertisement

Nearly Three Years of COVID-19: What Was Learned?

According to Dr. Deborah Birx, M.D., asking questions is paramount in continuing to deal properly with the virus.

August 29, 2022

In her keynote speech at the recent GBAC Symposium on Air Considerations, Dr. Deborah Birx, M.D., noted her excitement in knowing that participants were still asking questions about COVID-19.

In fact, she said, the lack of such questioning by most U.S. institutions was a reason why she wrote her book, Silent Invasion.

Birx said in her speech—Stopping the Pandemic of Magical Thinking—that she blew the whistle early in 2020 regarding COVID-19, its potential to become a pandemic, and the ramifications of focusing solely on very ill symptomatic carriers.

Keeping related data in mind, Birx discussed how COVID-19 has been handled since its initial outbreak—the mistakes that were made and the lessons that have been learned.

Initial Mistakes with COVID-19

Ignoring the asymptomatic spreaders, she said, “was our original ‘magical thinking.’ For decades, we believed that pandemic response was containing viruses and pandemics somewhere else off our shores. And that’s why we didn’t prepare as a country in a way that was successful.”

“None of pandemic preparedness plans included connections with our clinical care facilities or our commercial laboratories,” Birx continued. “There were no plans for a data stream from hospitals or clinical laboratories. There was only a plan for the surveillance system based on symptoms and our public health laboratories.”

A Continued Desire for Knowledge

But Birx stated that the COVID-19 pandemic spurred on an important “inflection point”—the desire for knowledge surrounding the virus. This includes employees knowing if workplaces are truly safe.

“COVID is…changing the work environment and employee expectations,” she said. “If you want people to come back to work with confidence, they’re going to expect you to demonstrate with data, not perception, that their workspace is safe.”

Specific Lessons Learned

So, what have we learned after living with the COVID-19 virus for nearly three years? Birx outlined the following key takeaways:

  • The surges of COVID-19 and its variants are predictable and occur within a very specific geographic standard.
  • Our current COVID-19 vaccines cannot produce herd immunity in the traditional sense.
  • Prior infection to COVID-19 does not prevent reinfection, as immunity to the virus wanes over time.
  • COVID-19 and its variants are still extremely deadly.

While pleased to see symposium participants still questioning and curious about COVID-19, Birx didn’t suggest that answers, particularly regarding vaccinations, would come easily. “When you don’t have a roadmap of what to do,” she said, “it makes vaccine development much more difficult.”

But, she continued, providing crystal clear information to the American public could help in general by creating correct expectations. “When Americans believe they have been misled, it’s very difficult to reestablish trust,” she said.

Due to current data, Birx expressed continued concern about COVID-19 and emphasized the need to stay vigilant by using all the tools available, with the ultimate goal being disease eradication.

To hear the entire discussion, watch the video of her keynote speech below.

Latest Articles

Air Quality 2.0—Shaping IAQ Now and Into the Future
April 17, 2024

Air Quality 2.0—Shaping IAQ Now and Into the Future

April 17, 2024 Jeff Cross

Why Sales Teams Must Design a ‘Buyer’s Journey’

April 16, 2024 Jeff Cross

Ant Invasions and Costly Consequences

Sponsored Articles

Jerred Attanasio at Spartan
April 11, 2024 Sponsored by Spartan Chemical Company

CleanCheck: The BSC’s Secret to Compliance, Safety, and Employee Retention

April 5, 2024 Sponsored by Sani Professional

Transforming Sustainability in Food Service: Sani Professional’s Versatile Dry Food Service Towel

March 18, 2024 Sponsored by Spartan Chemical Co.

Safer Choice® Certified Products From Spartan Chemical

Recent News

Scientists working together

How the CDC’s New Security Strategy Will Manage Emerging Health Threats

Why the Industry Needs Your Support to Advance Cleaning

Challenges Drag Out Lead Pipe Replacement