Where I live there are rainbows, and we help each other

In March 2006, Nancy Arcayna wrote in the Honolulu Star-Bulletin that every time Hector Venegas hears the song “Hawaiian Lullaby” he is reminded of his daughter, Krista.

“The song evolved from the situation of my daughter’s life … her life-threatening illness. I was extremely broken-hearted,” Hector said. He wrote the song for Krista more than 30 years ago as she recovered from a long bout of bacterial meningitis. Putting the words on paper helped him deal with an array of emotions, from fear, anger and resentment to love, he said: “I needed to turn my negative thoughts into positive ones. I wanted to see things in a different light. I didn’t want to see a shrink.”

Where I live, there are rainbows
With life in the laughter of morning
and starry nights

Where I live, there are rainbows
And flowers full of colors
and birds filled with song

I can smile when it’s raining
And touch the warmth of the sun
I hear children laughing
in this place that I love
Hawaiian Lullaby – Words by Hector Venegas & Peter Moon

Today, many of us are dealing with similar emotions and perhaps now more than ever need to be reminded of the truths embedded within this beautiful song.

I would add only one new line perhaps:

Where I live, we help each other
Those who have less
Who share our love and laughter
And our island home

While we are surrounded by challenges that may seem insurmountable, it is important that we remind each other that where we live, there are still rainbows.

No matter how desperate the situation or how great the challenge, we need to remember always that we are incredibly blessed to live in this place.
We are surrounded by a natural environment that both heals the body and rejuvenates the soul. Whether by being in or on the ocean, walking a mountain path, or simply looking out the window at the stars or watching the sunset or rise on the horizon, our load will be lightened and our spirit reborn.

Yes, where we live, there are rainbows. We have the beauty of nature and of a people grounded in a culture of aloha. Where we live, we help each other.

Recently I saw that a friend had posted online, that they feared running out of food.

My first thought was that where I come from, we help our friends and that no one in my community was ever, ever going to run out of food. Period.

We just would not let that happen.

We’ve survived Hurricane Iwa, Hurricane Iniki, 9/11, the great recession of 2008 and numerous floods and rain bursts along the way. Through it all, we survived and ultimately grew closer as a community because we helped each other.

Similarly, we will look back at history and see that we survived the great pandemic of 2020, for the same reasons. Because that’s how we roll. It’s ingrained in our collective DNA – we help each other.

After all, if you go back far enough we are in fact all related. We are all ohana.

And as my grandson Rixon and granddaughter Isabella will no doubt be reminding me in the future, “Ohana means family, family means no one gets left behind, or forgotten.” (Lilo & Stitch)

As ohana, we must remember to reach out to check on friends and family. We must offer food and friendship before the need arises and anticipate those among us who might need additional help and support. Yes, we all are taking a hit, but each of us can offer help in some meaningful way, whether it is with cash contributions to a worthy cause, or banana or papaya or lettuce from our garden.

To those who say that “it will never be the same” and that “life has changed forever” – I disagree and encourage you to revisit those thoughts. We collectively have survived many, many challenges over the years, from wars to plagues to earthquakes, volcanoes, and tsunami. Rather than lamenting how things won’t be the same, or just simply thinking about surviving and returning to normalcy, let’s work together, learn from the past and create an even better future.

The good news is that Hawaii’s infection rate seems to be dropping daily. If we continue to be strong, stay home, wash our hands, wear our masks and practice appropriate social distancing – sooner rather than later some sense of normalcy will in fact return. But we must remain vigilant. Sooner than we think, the COVID-19 era will be behind us.

Life goes on. The sun always comes up the next day, this too shall pass and always, always remember that where we live, there are rainbows.

Published in The Garden Island Newspaper – 04/22/2020

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Foresight, not hindsight should be our goal

2020 vision and decisive action by our state legislature is needed now more than ever. Hawaii cannot afford to wait until 2021.

The State House and Senate have each convened a “Special Committee on COVID-19”. Ostensibly the mission and goal of each committee is to monitor and review the pandemics’ economic impacts, and the executive branch’s management of the situation. Unfortunately, neither committee provides an opportunity for public input or testimony. Citizen input is a valuable and necessary component of any successful information gathering process and should be welcomed, not prohibited.

It would seem that by now both legislative committees have done their due diligence and that our legislature at some point soon will actually begin legislating. Whether the 2020 Session reconvenes in May and/or extends into a special session in June or even July, the work can and should begin now.

Word on the street however, is that leadership in the House and Senate is considering simply putting everything off until January of 2021. Apparently, they are thinking to “gavel in” the session around May 1, schedule a handful of hearings necessary to pass and fund Grant-In-Aid (GIA) requests and Capital Improvement Projects (CIP), and put off all other work until 2021.

Needless to say, I believe adjourning without addressing the many critical issues facing our community now, would be a gross failure of legislative leadership. There is much work to be done and no valid reason why the legislature cannot do it, this year.

Legislators can and should be doing the nitty-gritty work now, remotely. Just as the COVID-19 Special Committees are meeting, so can other committees of the House and Senate. Proposed bill language can be discussed remotely with experts and stakeholders, and possible amendments refined.

At some point in the coming few months, Hawaii will start reopening both business and government. The legislature could then be reconvened and extended into June or July as may be needed. There is no shortage of legislative “vehicles” (bills), and the appropriate public hearings could be held to comply with open government laws and avoid issues associated with “gut and replace”.

Hawaii needs more than just a blanket approval of so-called “shovel ready” projects and pending Grant-In-Aid (GIA) funding.

There are many issues that simply cannot wait until 2021.

The state budget must be massively readjusted in order to deal with the financial realities of tax revenue grinding to a halt as economic activity does the same. This process deserves and requires active legislative participation. Hiding on the sidelines, sheltered from the political ramifications of the hard choices while leaving the governor hanging out to dry – is not acceptable.

Nearly 25% of Hawaii’s workers are now unemployed. Without employment, most are also now without health insurance. Whether through an expansion of Med-Quest or via other means our legislature must develop and fund health coverage for these workers.

In order to fully reopen our economy, incoming travelers must be screened and tested for COVID-19. A statewide screening and testing program must be established with appropriate personnel hired and trained to implement it. This requires legislative action.

It is essential that worker rights be protected during the economic recovery period and beyond. Recently laid-off workers must be given first preference to return to their former jobs under the same terms that were previously held. The government must not allow nor reward businesses who attempt a shift to part-time, no health insurance, lower-wage workers.

The EITC and other tax credits aimed at low income working people along with the minuscule increase in the minimum wage must be preserved and passed into law. Our state budget must not be balanced on the backs of low income working people.

The fragility of our food supply chain has become more apparent than ever. Providing both public policy and tangible financial support to local farmers growing food for local consumption is crucially important and should not have to wait until 2021. Our farmers need help now.

Emergency funding could and should be used to support “remote access” that will allow all residents access to the legislative process and meaningful public participation, regardless of where they reside. According to the National Council on State Legislatures (NCSL), Alaska began holding remote hearings for residents in 1978. In 2014, more than 4,000 citizens participated remotely in 5,000 hours of legislative teleconferences. Here in the islands, Hawaii County and Maui County both allow residents to testify via teleconference from remote locations. Given the COVID-19 limitations on “social distancing” and other “stay-at-home rules, now more than ever the Hawaii State Legislature needs to make universal remote access a reality.

GIA funding should be substantially increased and new applications from entrepreneurs focused on food-self sufficiency, import-substitution, recycling, economic diversification, and job creation should be encouraged. Construction projects should be funded only if they truly meet the needs of the community, and are genuine “shovel ready,” rather than just pet projects located in some influential legislators district. 

Waiting until 2021 to tackle these and many other issues facing our state would be an unequivocal failure in leadership. I am hopeful and cautiously optimistic that those elected to high office, will not let us down.

First published on April 15, 2020 in The Garden Island newspaper.

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Neighbor-Islands Poised To Lead Economic Recovery

“Essentially, economists say, there won’t be a fully functioning economy again until people are confident that they can go about their business without a high risk of catching the virus.” New York Times April 6, 2020.

A high bar to overcome, with new cases of COVID-19 being reported daily through-out Hawaii. For the City and County of Honolulu and its 1,000,000 residents living in relatively dense urban communities, the challenge to reach this threshold is significantly greater than the other three less populated, neighbor-island counties.

Thus Kauai, Maui and Hawaii County could, in fact, lead the way in terms of both protecting health and restarting the economy. Oahu, of course, will also get to the same place, but primarily because of the larger population, it will likely take longer to do so.

Step one for all islands is to eliminate the spread of the virus. Thankfully, the flow of incoming travelers has slowed to a trickle and police are increasing enforcement of the 14-day quarantine. We need to take the next step and basically lock our islands down.

If we show the discipline and commitment needed, we can, in fact, stop the virus. But we must do better and avoid going out, period. Running errands because we are bored, is not acceptable – we must only go out when it’s absolutely required – as in urgent.

So first we aim for zero. No new cases of COVID-19 are the goal. In order to even start a gradual reopening of businesses, we must slow the spread and reverse the trend.

To get to zero and stay there we must also further tighten requirements for all incoming travel. With the coming availability of the FDA approved Abbott laboratories “15 minute test”, every incoming traveler regardless of their point of origin should be tested (either prior to their point of origin departure or upon arrival). This is the same test taken by President Trump and the same test currently being deployed widely in Detroit Michigan.

With an approximate population of fewer than 75,000 people on Kauai, 160,000 on Maui and just over 200,000 on the Big Island of Hawaii – and with increasing testing capacity, soon we should be able to test virtually 100% of neighbor-island residents. Oahu, with a population of about 1,000,000 people, represents a much greater logistical challenge.

Think about it. When any island can get to zero spread (or statistically as close to zero as is possible), and testing of travelers is mandated, then all businesses on that island can reopen and residents can go back to hugging, high-fiving and shaking hands with family, friends, and neighbors.

That island or islands then becomes the most valuable visitor destination on the planet that people cannot come to unless they first “test negative”.

According to a report recently released by the University of Hawaii Economic Research Office (UHERO):

“Tourism could resume quickly if two necessary conditions are met: (1) Potential tourists perceive Hawaii to be a safe place to visit and (2) Hawaii residents can be assured tourists are free of the coronavirus.

The first condition could be satisfied sometime this summer if Hawaii builds on its already considerable achievements by moving ahead with the testing, contact tracing, isolation, and mask policies recommended in this report.

The second condition could also be satisfied this summer if rapid antigen and antibody tests become readily available to people wanting to vacation in Hawaii. Travelers will take a rapid antigen test within a day of boarding their flight to confirm that they do not carry the coronavirus. A second antigen test might be required in Hawaii within a day of the passenger’s flight home…Abbott Labs is currently rolling out an antigen test that provides results within 5-15 minutes…It is possible, but far from certain, that Hawaii will become particularly attractive as a vacation destination later this year if it is one of the first global visitor destinations to have its epidemic under control.” Read the entire UHERO Report.

The UHERO report is important reading and focuses on the entire state of Hawaii. The reality though is that the neighbor-islands have the ability to reopen their economies independently of Oahu and each other. With a population of only 75,000 people, a Mayor who has been particularly assertive in enforcing the “stay at home” orders, and the potential introduction of “15 minute” airport testing – Kauai County is in a unique position to lead.

Each island community can and must pull together to make this happen. As hard as it is, we must continue to stay home. Our government leaders must work together with the medical community and with the airline and travel industry to make this happen, sooner and not later.

*Mahalo to Tim Brown (EWC epidemiologist) Sumner La Croix (Ph.D. Economics) for the UHERO report, and to Kauai resident Steve Lauryn for bringing the entire discussion to my attention.

Detroit will be first US city to use newly approved rapid coronavirus tests, mayor says: USA Today – Detroit Free Press

CVS ramps up drive-through coronavirus testing sites with faster kits: Reuters News

Abbott Launches 5-Minute Virus Test for Use Almost Anywhere: Bloomberg News

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Post-Pandemic Public Policy – The Conversation Starts Now

Post-Pandemic Public Policy – The Conversation Starts Now

Incoming travel has just about been eliminated. The hotels and airlines are shutting down, restaurants and many businesses have closed, and residents are staying home.
At some point soon our broader community conversation must shift from the fear and response of the moment to our hope and plans for the future. And yes, for now anyway we must have this conversation from home.

As a former legislator who served at both the State and County level, I tend to look at problems and challenges through a public policy lens.

1) How do we maximize the opportunity for a strong economic “bounce back” once the pandemic has peaked and life starts returning to normal?

2) How do we immediately and boldly charge down the long-overdue path of food self-sufficiency?

3) What about the 48% of those who were already living on the edge of poverty, prior to the arrival of Covid-19?

4) The homeless situation is only going to get worse. How do we get ahead of this issue in a humane and economically sensible way?

5) Can we use this emergency to make our government better and more accessible by offering statewide access and remote testimony?

6) How can we improve our health care system to ensure that no-one will be denied treatment, and our hospitals and medical facilities remain strong?

For each of these challenges, there are public policy proposals now in place that await legislative leadership. Some measures sit in the form of bills introduced during the 2019/2020 legislative session and others will need to be amended and/or added to existing legislative vehicles. When the 2020 legislative session resumes, the State House and Senate could and should “re-boot” an array of legislative vehicles, hold the necessary public hearings (avoiding the issues with “gut and replace”), and appropriately address these pressing needs.

The list and suggestions contained here are not all-inclusive but rather intended to show clear examples of what can and should be done.

We need construction jobs and we need to invest in rebuilding our public infrastructure. Investing in construction is an obvious and important part of getting our economy back on its feet. At some point, we also must kick-start our visitor industry back into gear. Both are pillars of our economy. We need construction projects that reflect good planning and benefit our community, without sacrificing our natural environment. We need a visitor industry with limits, that pays its own way, and that caters to travelers who are mindful of their impact, and who tread lightly when they visit our special places.

The fragility of our “supply chain” and the need for food self-sufficiency has never been so apparent. We must attack this challenge with the commitment it deserves. There are many, many ways to tackle this issue and it starts with requiring all State and County owned institutions that serve food, to whenever possible purchase only locally grown agricultural products. Imagine the immediate impact on local food production if every public school, every UH campus, every jail and prison, and every public medical facility, were required to purchase their food from local farmers and ranchers.

The economically vulnerable 48%, are likely post Covid-19 closer to 70% of our population. Now is not the time to balance the state budget on their backs. Hard-earned and much-deserved tax credits and modest incremental wage increases must be preserved and in fact, expanded.

Those who are houseless require multi-faceted support delivered via intensive individual case management. Mental health services, shelter availability, job training, and access to food and medical services- all must be managed by qualified trained service providers. There is a public price to pay no matter what. An investment in expanded support services and additional trained social workers, is both morally and economically, the right thing to do.

Creating a system that allows everyone in Hawaii to participate in delivering testimony to the State legislature and other public institutions, without having to fly to Oahu is long overdue. One-third of our population is effectively disenfranchised by the current system. During the current Covid-19 crisis that number is closer to 100%. With the wide availability of modern communication technology, there is no legitimate excuse to continue delaying the implementation of a system that would allow remote testimony and public participation, regardless of where you live.

The revamping and providing of increased support for Hawaii’s health care system is above my pay grade. While I still have a lot to learn about this topic, I do know one thing for sure. This whole experience has reaffirmed that people’s healthcare should not be tied to their employment. Hawaii’s residents deserve single-payer universal health care.

Legislative leadership together with the Chairs’ of key committees can start this process now without convening formal in-person meetings. Discussions with experts, agencies and key stakeholders can be held remotely and the proposed amendment language developed. Then, when it’s safe and appropriate to reconvene the legislative session, the bills can be promptly scheduled, hearings held, the measures amended as needed, and then passed into law.

Yes. Let’s turn our attention toward utilizing the urgency of the moment to create something good for our future. We need to stay home and hunker down, but also get moving toward making that lemonade.

First publishing in Civil Beat – April 4th, 2020

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Guest Commentary – Important to read for a global health perspective that effects us locally

The below email and commentary came to me this morning. While it is somewhat long and academicaly dense in nature…my instincts tell me that it is important and worth sharing….so here it is (and I checked him out…this guy is very legit):

“I have been a Hawaii resident and physician since the 1970s but also served the State Department as the first Minister of health in Iraq…I am a highly respected scholar and researcher. You should also be aware of the major change that must take place ASAP to assist in moving the dialogue to move WHO into a totally neutral authority that is independently funded….we are a global society now and need WHO and the Treaty independently funded to represent the world, not just rich countries! This global movement must be started by informed local citizens…

Please distribute,

Sincerely,

Frederick M. Burkle, Jr., MD, MPH, PhD (Hon.), DTM, FAAP, FACEP
Professor (Ret.), Senior Fellow & Scientist
Harvard Humanitarian Initiative,
Harvard University & T.H. Chan School of Public Health

COMMENTARY
Political Intrusions into the International Health Regulations Treaty and Its Impact on Management of Rapidly Emerging Zoonotic Pandemics: What History Tells Us
Frederick M. Burkle, Jr., MD, MPH, DTM, Ph.D. (Hon), FAAP, FACEP

Professor (Ret.), Senior Fellow & Scientist
Harvard Humanitarian Initiative, 
Harvard University & T.H. Chan School of Public Health

Senior International Public Policy Scholar
Woodrow Wilson International Center for Scholars
Washington, DC

National Academy of Medicine, elected ’07

Section Editor for Humanitarian Affairs, Prehospital and Disaster Medicine

Correspondence: E-mail: fburkle@hsph.harvard.edu

Keywords: Coronavirus; Sir William Osler; Global public health; Globalization; World Health Organization; Pandemics

Word count: 2,486

Abstract

For the large number of healthcare providers worldwide, the COVID-19 pandemic is their first experience in population-based care. In past decades, lower population densities, infectious disease outbreaks, epidemics and pandemics were rare and driven almost exclusively by natural disasters, predatory animals, and war. In the early 1900’s, Sir William Osler first advanced our knowledge of zoonotic diseases that are spread from reservoir animals to human animals. Once rare they now make up 71% or more of new diseases. Globally, zoonotic spread occurs for many reasons. Because the human population has grown in numbers and density, the spread of these diseases accelerated though rapid unsustainable urbanization, biodiversity loss, and climate change. Furthermore, they are exacerbated by an increasing number of vulnerable populations suffering from chronic deficiencies in food, water, and energy. The World Health Organization and its International Health Regulation Treaty, organized to manage population-based diseases such as Influenza, SARS, H1N1, MERS, HIV and Ebola have failed to meet population-based expectations. In part, this is due to influence from powerful political donors which has become most evident in the current COVID-19 pandemic.

The global community can no longer tolerate an ineffectual and passive international response system, nor tolerate the self-serving political interference that authoritarian regimes and others have exercised over the World Health Organization. In a highly integrated globalized world, both the World Health Organization with its Treaty have the potential to become one of the most effective mechanisms for crisis response and risk reduction worldwide. Practitioners and health decision-makers must break their silence and advocate for a stronger treaty, a return of the World Health Organization’s singular global authority, and support highly coordinated population-based management. As Osler recognized, his concept of “one medicine, one health,” defines what global public health is today.

The International Health Regulations Dilemma

The World Health Organization (WHO) was established to further international cooperation for improved public health. As the directing and coordinating authority on international health within the United Nation’s (UN) system WHO inherited specific tasks relating to epidemic control. Specifically, its main mandates include “directing, leading and coordinating the health response during infectious disease emergencies, working with countries to increase and sustain access to prevention, treatment, and care, and identifying priorities and setting strategies.”1 Specific International Health Regulations (IHR), with timely revisions, were conceived to serve as a first step in providing specific and universal medical knowledge of a unique infectious disease outbreak. WHO also created distinctive rules, regulations and organizational constraints such as travel restrictions, examples being the emergence and pandemic potential of HIV/AIDS and the urgency provoked by SARS in 2003.2

The IHR must immediately notify the WHO of any outbreaks that constitute a public health emergency of international concern (PHEIC). The IHR is also obligated to immediately alert and marshal resources and coordinate all global response efforts.

Whereas the IHRs provide a vital governing framework to limit the spread of disease, serious deficiencies, omissions, gaps, and political resistance began to occur. Gostin and Katz described widespread noncompliance to the IHR detailing multiple needed textual and operational reforms, emphasizing that WHO and the IHR “erred at multiple levels during the Ebola epidemic” and WHO failed “to mobilize adequate fiscal and human resources until the epidemic was spinning out of control.”3 In 2015, after the Ebola epidemic, I wrote “the intent of the legally binding Treaty to improve the capacity of all countries to detect, assess, notify, and respond to public health threats has shamefully lapsed”4 and that global health security demanded both a stronger WHO and a stronger IHR treaty.

WHO, sponsored by the UN, currently has two primary sources of revenue: assessed contributions expected to be paid by member state governments, income and population; and voluntary contributions provided by member states, and contributions from private organizations and individuals, the latter of which opens the WHO up to being influenced by the highest bidder.

WHO must exist solely as a treaty-based organization sanctioned by the UN and all its members, not be dependent on outside financial assistance to do its work. Healthcare experts, as Sir William Osler described, must be in charge of all health decisions, monitoring, response, and operational research. They neither abdicate any responsibilities to individual nation-states nor be beholden to them for support.

The bottom line is that the global community can no longer tolerate an ineffectual and passive international response system, nor tolerate the self-serving political interference that authoritarian regimes, nationalism, and populism demand. This remains a highly integrated globalized world when it comes to public health protections.

The current COVID-19 pandemic experience leads to only one solution; WHO must be restructured from top to bottom to remove individual countries from health and public health assessment, decisions and management. Without political pressure, WHO and the IHR Treaty have the potential to become the most effective partners in crisis response and risk reduction. Practitioners and health decision-makers worldwide must break their silence and advocate for a stronger Treaty and a return of WHO’s singular authority.

The Legacy of Sir William Osler

The majority of healthcare providers worldwide practice one-on-one care with their patients. Population-based care has not been emphasized in their training. A major deficiency in global health and the entire IHR process has been the failure to recognize the importance of zoonotic diseases-those diseases that can be passed from animals to humans. Worldwide, zoonotic diseases represent 61% of all diseases and an alarming 71% of new diseases. Second only to war, zoonotic epidemics have killed more humans than any other disease. Today we know that climate change, overuse of antibiotics and more intensified farming are thought to also be increasing the rate of zoonotic diseases globally. 5,

My first experience in zoonotic disease was in 1968 during the Viet Nam War. That year, South Viet Nam witnessed the largest bubonic plague epidemic of the 20th century. Indeed, that outbreak temporarily paused the war on both sides of the conflict and emptied small villages and larger city streets. It prompted me to educate myself on the massive influence zoonotic diseases have on the environment and public health.

For many of my generation of physicians, Sir William Osler remains a crucial role model, famous for his writings and for taking the teaching of medicine out of the classroom to the bedside. Few know that he taught at both medical and veterinarian colleges advancing our basic knowledge of veterinary pathology and zoonotic diseases or those that commonly spread from non-human animals to humans. Osler’s work advanced the understanding of today’s infectious disease outbreaks, epidemics, and pandemics.

It was a veterinarian, Calvin Schwabe, schooled under Osler’s teachings and now recognized as the father of veterinary epidemiology, who first coined the term “One Medicine” as the science of health and disease in which “differences between humans and animals are not considered.”6 Schwabe pointed out that most infectious diseases of humans have an animal origin that incorporated the “inclusion of environmental health, as opposed to simply medical treatment”7 into the crucial management of major infectious diseases such as SARS, H1N1 and today’s COVID-19.

In his 1906 book Aequanimitus, Osler emphasized that medicine is the “only worldwide profession following the same methods, actuating the same ambitions, and pursuing the same ends.” He emphasized that this “homogeneity” or “solidarity” which physicians worldwide are witnessing today with the COVID-19 pandemic is a quality “not shared by law”…or politics, that “allows physicians to practice the same art amid the same surroundings in every country on earth.”8 This unity of effort is not seen in other professions, and is witnessed today with the wide support given by medical colleagues from other countries, all cooperating on essential clinical and public health research.

Sadly, Osler died in 1919 at age the of 70 from Spanish Influenza while teaching at Oxford. The Spanish Influenza was also called “swine flu” because it allegedly jumped from live pigs to humans killing a quarter of the world’s population.9

The capacity for Swine flu to survive and to initiate a second pandemic in 2009 was possible because it thrived and spread as a new mix of genes from swine, birds, and human flu viruses. We now live in an age of epidemics and pandemics. Predictably, and in its own time, the Swine Flu will reemerge once again.

Origins of Global Public Health

Modern-day scholars have taken the “One Medicine” concept and advanced it into the “One Health Initiative” a movement that seeks to “forge greater collaboration between the health disciplines” advocating for multidisciplinary efforts to improve global health in general. It became a globally shared concept and worldwide strategy for expanding interdisciplinary collaborations and communications in all aspects of health care for humans, animals, and the environment. The synergism accelerated “biomedical research discoveries, enhancing public health efficacy, expeditiously expanding the scientific knowledge base, and improving medical education and clinical care.”10

When properly implemented, the “One Medicine” concept would help protect and save untold millions of lives in present and future generations.11

This concept eventually incorporated specific expertise in biohazard events, food and water safety, vector-borne diseases, established and emerging zoonotic diseases, herd health, foreign animal risks, and public health issues such as antimicrobial drug resistance.“12 This would come to define One Health advocates and practitioners of the future and today defines what we now refer to as the operational elements of “global public health.”

Life and Death of Globalization

Beginning in the 1970s, major economic and political changes occurred when economically leading Western countries developed businesses in Third World countries, a process referred to as “globalization”. With it came the realization that the economy was a major force behind the setting of public policies, including health policies. Increasingly, the process revealed that the power of governments to shape national policy was, in many cases, being considerably limited and diminished by an increasingly competitive international economy where some countries impacted by globalization either thrived or collapsed. 13

Global health experts, and those focusing on humanitarian and crisis management, who were excluded from any cross-cultural economic debates, closely watched from afar how and where public health infrastructure and protections in water, shelter, food, and availability of health services would either benefit or suffer from globalization. Too often local public health and the global health priorities they impacted took a backseat to economic demands resulting in “weakening of life-supporting systems“, specifically “altered composition of the atmosphere, land degradation, depletion of terrestrial aquifers and ocean fisheries, and loss of biodiversity.”14

These are elements we know today that can lead to acquiring and spreading of epidemic infections such as SARS, H1N1, and Influenza. Health and public health were never at the same globalization negotiating table but were more often silently relegated to a catchup role that tried to mitigate the impact on health caused by increasing globalization.

With increasing globalization and speed of transportation, infections rapidly began migrating across borders. Yet WHO, now equipped with improved telecommunications, developed an increased capacity to readily detect emerging epidemics, a major improvement never before available with previous epidemics and pandemics.

An encouraging aspect of globalization was the increasing number of the millennial generation who studied abroad and worked on various humanitarian missions. As a result, they began seeing themselves less as nationalists and more as global citizens.15,16 However, with the recent rise and dominance of authoritarian regimes and populism, globalization has essentially noticeably faded and is rapidly becoming a non-entity. Both the word “globalization” and its concept have disappeared under a coordinated false narrative campaign promoted by autocrats and rising nationalist state movements.17,18

Ghitia contends that “modern-day would-be dictators don’t overthrow another government. What they do is take over the system of government.” She emphasized that their methods are more gradual, “manipulating the democratic norms, wearing them down to a thin shell that contains only the wrecked remains of democracy.”19 By the time most people realize what happened, it is too late to push back. I talked to an investor once active in the globalization movement asking what was going to happen with the large number of desperately needed public health infrastructure projects. His response was “only if they can show us a profit.”

Increasing Threats that Enable Pandemic Spread

In past decades, human population densities were much too low for viral illnesses to widely occur and outbreaks were, more often than not, driven almost exclusively by natural disasters, predatory animals and prolonged wars. Globally zoonotic spread occurred simply because the human population has grown in numbers and become more dense. The spread was enhanced and accelerated by rapid unsustainable urbanization, biodiversity loss, climate change, and its extremes. This has resulted in producing further viral engagement with an increasing number of a new vulnerable population suffering from chronic deficiencies in food, water, and energy.

The current SARS COVID-19 transmission that flourished in wet market animals, whether it be a bat or civet, spread easily to the human-animal, a perfect host. The chaos created by the rapid spread of COVID-19 has created an unprecedented opportunity for state-sponsored disinformation. Probably the most infamous infectious disease disinformation incident was the KGB’s “Operation Infektion” in the 1980s, which blamed the United States for the creation and spread of HIV. Although the USSR conceded in 1992 that the KGB had instigated and perpetuated the myth, considerable damage was done, most importantly global distrust of the “official narrative” which fed into claims that HIV does not cause AIDS and distrust that the anti-retroviral used to treat HIV was useless resulting in more than 330,000 preventable deaths.20 

What continues today is a Russian autocratic regime that still places greater emphasis on false epidemic narratives than solving its own fast-growing global rates of HIV/AIDS and TB.

Russia and China are exploiting both real-life mistakes and weaknesses in the information space to control and modify the narrative with impacts on geopolitics and national security. Spreading conspiracy theories from China, Russia, and the United States is rampant, all systems designed to deflect responsibility for their bureaucratic failures. China is now seeking to blame the United States for COVID-19 claiming, “further evidence that the virus originated in the US” and was planted in China by the US Army. Russia is sowing divisions between and within Western countries to undermine public confidence in government competence and integrity.21

WHO, despite having in hand evidence to the contrary, failed to properly contain the COVID-19 pandemic. China’s gross denial and failure to investigate and alert other nations is inexcusable. Moreover, its malignant behavior toward clinicians and researchers who warned the government of the outbreak, when the virus was first known as far back as October of 2019, is equally inexcusable. Yet the February 16-24, 2020 “Report of the WHO-China Joint Mission on Coronavirus Disease 2019” singularly praised China’s response as the best source of medical technology to deal with the pandemic. China then declared that their singular success in controlling the pandemic should qualify them to take over the WHO. 22

While the European Union and the United States struggle to control the COVID-19 pandemic, WHO fully supports China’s “One Belt, One Road” initiative across Africa to improve the economy of the continent. However, the lessons from globalization prove that economic prosperity alone cannot be achieved when huge knowledge and capacity gaps exist in health systems, especially public health and health information systems.

There is a need for public health initiatives aimed at strengthening the health systems beyond sovereign borders to influence global geo-economics. 23 Whereas WHO has fully supported this initiative with claims that China is investing in “people’s health outside its border” the deplorable coverup, response, and management of COVID-19 for many months before it was known to the world questions whether China is up to the public health challenges it claims in Africa or fully understands the vital connections economic development has with public health. China claims that ruling Africa’s economy is a necessary prelude to the “next phase of globalization.”24

Ever since WHO first announced the presence of clusters of unknown pneumonia on December 31, 2019, an alarming concern has surfaced that WHO has become beholden to influential countries for funding support giving wealthy UN members, especially China, support and influence both before and during the coronavirus outbreak. For example, WHO’s position regarding China has renewed a longstanding debate about whether WHO, founded 72 years ago, is sufficiently independent to allow it to fulfill its purpose.25

Critics raised questions concerning WHO’s response over how “China’s sway over the WHO is its success in blocking Taiwan’s access to the body, a position that could have very real consequences for the Taiwanese people if the virus takes hold there”. Others cite that WHO “downplayed the harsh control of medical whistleblowers,” and the critical delay in revealing COVID’s presence and; further argue that WHO is “overly bureaucratic, bizarrely structured, too dependent on a handful of major donors, and often hamstrung by political concerns.” 26

With the COVID-19 crisis, “the state of politics and geopolitics has exacerbated, not stabilized the crisis.”27 This applies to many countries, especially China, the United States, Japan, Cambodia, Iran, and South Korea. Authors cite former WHO consultant Charles Clift who observed, as have many former insiders, that WHO “is too politicized, too bureaucratic, too dominated by medical staff seeking medical solutions to what are often social and economic problems, and too timid in approaching controversial issues, too overstretched and too slow to adapt to change.” He added that WHO, being “both a technical agency and a policy-making body, that excessive intrusion of political considerations in its technical work can damage its authority and credibility as a standard-bearer for health.”25, 28

US President Trump has not done better in what must be a coordinated world response. His idea of “America first and national populism is against everything that we believe in global health.”29 In January 2019, China made available the “genome” of this mysterious new virus in hopes of producing the first diagnostic test for the disease but the United States declined to use the WHO test even temporarily as a bridge until the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention could produce its test.” This action remains a perplexing question and the key to the Trump administration’s failure to provide enough tests to identify the coronavirus infection”, needlessly slowing the critical domestic testing process and surveillance.30 Additionally, President Trump’s reliance on the validity of his “hunches”, claimed WHO’s mortality rate was “false,” irresponsibly valuing his “best guesses over scientific analysis.” This has led to a “false sense of security that endangers public health.” 31

Both China and the United States have public health infrastructure and service deficiencies that have gone unattended for decades. Public health infrastructure in the United States makes up only 3% of healthcare spending focused on prevention and public health, while 75% of health care costs are related to preventable conditions.32

China chronically suffers low public health standards in toilets, restaurants, hospitals, and meat markets; and the United States. has 50 states and 55 very different health department ratings.33 As an example during the COVID-19 pandemic, Mississippi, which rates last in public health infrastructure, has created confusion with many of its mayors claiming the need for curfews and closing of businesses, only to be overridden by the State’s governor. 34

The Only Solution

WHO must exist solely as a treaty-based organization sanctioned by the UN and all its members. It cannot be dependent on outside financial assistance to do its work. The unique characteristics of propagating zoonotic diseases must be better known by both the medical profession and governmental decision-makers. Healthcare experts, as Osler described, must be in charge of all health decisions, monitoring, response, and operational research. They cannot abdicate any responsibilities to individual nation-states nor be beholden to them or well-financed donors for support.

Current disaster taxonomy describes diversity, distinguishing characteristics, and common relations in disaster event classifications. The impact of compromised public health infrastructure and systems on health consequences defines and greatly influences how disasters are observed, planned for, and managed, especially those that are geographically widespread, population-dense, and prolonged.35 The One Health concept helps to set the path forward for a solution based on local grassroots coordination, and a bottom-up capability driven by medical, veterinary and public health practitioners. This must include rapid, networked information sharing and the use of multiple expert disciplines to mitigate an outbreak.

Lastly, public health and public health infrastructure and systems in developing countries must be seen as strategic and security issues that deserve international public health resource monitoring. This must cover the entire disaster cycle from prevention, preparedness, response, recovery, and rehabilitation.36 All six WHO Regional Offices must have similar multidisciplinary professional assets in support of zoonotic sciences. As Osler might declare today, “There is so much more we need to know!”

References
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Velimirovic B. Do we still need International Health regulations? The Journal of Infectious Diseases. April 1976. Vol. 133, No. 4, pp. 478-482.

Gostin LO, Katz R. The International Health Regulations: The Governing Framework for Global Health Security. Milbank Q. 2016 Jun;94(2):264-313. doi:10.1111/1468-0009.12186.

Burkle FM Jr. Global Health Security Demands a Strong International Health Regulations Treaty and Leadership From a Highly Resourced World Health Organization. Disaster Med Public Health Prep. 2015 Oct;9(5): 568-80.doi:10.1017/dmp.2015.26.

Seymour T. Types of zoonotic diseases. Medical News Today. 15 January 2018. Available at https://www.medicalnewstoday.com/articles/320618. Accessed 21 March 2020.

Zinsstag J, Schelling E, Waltner-Toews D, Tanner M. From “one medicine” to “one health” and systemic approaches to health and well-being. Prev Vet Med. 2011;101(3-4):148–156. doi:10.1016/j.prevetmed.2010.07.003

Pyle G. Animals at your doctyor’s office? One Health, one solution. Lifeapps. 15 Dec 2018 Available at: https://lifeapps.io/research/animals-at-your-doctors-office-one-health-one-solution/. Accessed 20 Feb 2020.

Osler W. Aequanimitas: With other Addresses to medical students, nurses and practitioners of medicine Third edition. Mc Graw-Hill Book Company, Ince New York. Pp429-431.

Gregory P, Rahman NM, Lee YCG. Osler Centenary Papers: Management of pleural infection: Osler’s final illness and recent advances. Postgrad Med J. 2019 Dec;95(1130):656-659. doi: 10.1136/postgradmedj-2018-135893. Accessed 12 Feb 2010.

Investigating Interdisciplinary Collaboration: Theory and Practice across Disciplines. Frickel S, Albert M, Prainsack B, Editors. New Brunswick (NJ): Rutgers University Press; 2016.

Khan MS, Rothman-Ostrow P, Spencer J, Hasan N, Sabirovic M, Rahman-Shepherd A,Shaikh N, Heymann DL, Dar O. The growth and strategic functioning of One Health networks: a systematic analysis. Lancet Planet Health. 2018 Jun;2(6):e264-e273.doi: 10.1016/S2542-5196(18)30084-6. PubMed PMID: 29880158.

Gebreyes WA, Dupouy-Camet J, Newport MJ, et al. The global one health paradigm: challenges and opportunities for tackling infectious diseases at the human, animal, and environment interface in low-resource settings. PLoS Negl Trop Dis. 2014;8(11):e3257. Published 2014 Nov 13. doi:10.1371/journal.pntd.0003257.

Navarro V. Comment: whose globalization? Public Health Policy Forum. American Journal of Public Health, May 1998, Vol 88, No.5: 743-46. Available at: ajph.aphapublications.org. Accessed 21 March 2020.

McMichael AJ, Beaglehole R. The changing global context of public health. Lancet. 2000 Aug 5;356(9228):495-9.

Burkle FM Jr, Egawa S, MacIntyre AG, Otomo Y, Beadling CW, Walsh JT. The 2015 Hyogo Framework for Action: cautious optimism. Disaster Med Public Health Prep.2014 Jun;8(3):191-2. doi: 10.1017/dmp.2014.50.

Burkle FM Jr, Egawa S, MacIntyre AG, et al. The 2015 Hyogo Framework for Action: cautious optimism. Disaster Med Public Health Prep. 2014;8(3):191-192.

Burkle FM. Character Disorders among Autocratic World Leaders and the Impact on Health Security, Human Rights, and Humanitarian Care. Prehosp Disaster Med.2019 Jan 15:1-6. doi: 10.1017/S1049023X18001280.
Meijer RI. Globalization is dead, but the idea is not. August 10, 2016. https://www.
theautomaticearth.com/2016/08/globalization-is-dead-but-the-idea-is-not/. Accessed April 12, 2018.

Ghitis, F. Dictatorship, 21st-century style. CNN: Opinion. August 8, 2017. https://www.cnn.com/2017/08/08/opinions/dictator-lessons-opinion-ghitis/index.html.Accessed October 11, 2018.

Grimes DR. Russian fake news is not new: Soviet AIDS propaganda cost countless lives. Wed 14 Jan 2017 .Notes & Theories: AIDS and HIV. The Guardian. Available at: https://www.theguardian.com/science/blog/2017/jun/14/russian-fake-news-is-not-new-soviet-aids-propaganda-cost-countless-lives. Accessed 22 March 2020.

Pomfret J. The US-China coronavirus blame game and conspiracies are getting dangerous. The Washington Post. March 17, 2020 a 8:55 a.m. HST. Available at: https://www.washingtonpost.com/opinions/2020/03/17/us-china-coronavirus-blame-game-conspiracies-are-getting-dangerous/. Accessed 23 March 2020.

Report of the WHO-China Joint Mission on Coronavirus Disease 2019 (COVID-19).16-24 February 2010. Available at:https://www.google.com/search?client=firefox-b-1-d&q=WHO+report+on+China+. Accessed 20 March 2020.

Tambo E, Khayeka-Wanndabwa,C, Muuchin GW, et al. China’s Belt and Road Initiative: Incorporating public health measures toward global economic growth and shared prosperity. Global Health Journal, June 2019:;3(2),; 46-49. Available at: https://doi.org/10.1016/j.glohj.2019.06.003.Accessed 22 March 2020.

Woetzel J, Lin Diaan-Yi Lin, Seong J, Madgavkar A., Lund S. Discussion Paper: China’s role in the next phase of globalization. McKinsey global Institute April 2017. Available at https://www.google.com/search?client=firefox-b-1-d&q=afric+china%27s+second+phase+of+globalization.Accessed 22 March 2020.

CNN. The coronavirus crisis is raising questions over China’s relationship with the World Health Organization. US & World. 16 February 2020. Available at: https://kvia.com/news/us-world/2020/02/16/the-coronavirus-crisis-is-raising-questions-over-chinas-relationship-with-the-world-health-organization/.Accessed 22 March 2020.

Berlinger J, Yeung J, Renton A, et al. February 17 coronavirus news. CNN World. 9:08 PM, Feb 17, 2020. Available at: https://www.cnn.com/asia/live-news/coronavirus-outbreak-02-17-20-intl-hnk/h_4d2105ec7870b7574c4f45c310523e83. Accessed 21 March 2020.

Wright T, Campbell K. The coronavirus is exposing the limits of populism .Brookings. Thursday 5 March 2020. Available at: https://www.brookings.edu/blog/order-from-chaos/2020/03/05/the-coronavirus-is-exposing-the-limits-of-populism/.Accessed 23 March 2020.

Griffiths J. The coronavirus crisis is raising questions over China’s relationship with the world Health organization. CNN 16 February 2020. Available at https://www.cnn.com/2020/02/14/asia/coronavirus-who-china-intl-hnk/index.html. Accessed 23 March 2020.

Kolhakar S. The coronavirus panic exposes the pathology of Nationalism. Common Dreams. 7 Feb 2020. Available at: https://www.commondreams.org/views/2020/02/07/coronavirus-panic-exposes-pathology-nationalism. Accessed 20 March 2020.

Kenen J. How testing failures allowed coronavirus to sweep the US. POLITICO, 6 March 2020 . Available at: https://www.politico.com/news/2020/03/06/coronavirus-testing-failure-123166. Accessed 23 March 20020.

Jackson D. Coronavirus death rate is 3.4%, world health organization says, Trump says ‘hunch’ tells him that’s wrong. USA Today 5 March 2020. Available at: https://www.usatoday.com/story/news/politics/2020/03/05/coronavirus-trump-disputes-world-health-organization-death-rate/4961519002/. Accessed 23 March 2020.

Strengthen Public Health Infrastructure and Capacity. American Public Health Association.2020. Available at: https://www.apha.org/what-is-public-health/generation-public-health/our-work/infrastructure. Accessed 23 March 2020.

Uretsky E. Is China ready for this major health challenge?. 27 Jan 2020. https://subscribe.washingtonpost.com/acquisition/?promo=o1&wp_prop=-1&arcId=V6BPG4WZ6VAMRCGXV2CD6BYEOQ&acqEntType=wall_standard&destination=https%3A%2F%2Fwww.washingtonpost.com%2Fpolitics%2F2020%2F01%2F27%2Fis-china-ready-this-major-global-health-challenge%2F&. Accessed 25 March 2020.

Solls RV. Mississippi Gov Reeves: Closing businesses amid virus could do harm. FOX10. 21 March 2020. Available at https://www.fox10tv.com/news/mississippi-gov-reeves-closing-businesses-amid-virus-could-do-harm/article_53e23bee-6d5f-11ea-a798-2b9d592322b5.html. Accessed 25 March 2020.

Burkle FM Jr, Greenough PG. Impact of public health emergencies on modern disaster taxonomy, planning, and response. Disaster Med Public Health Prep. 2008 Oct;2(3):192-9. doi: 10.1097/DMP.0b013e3181809455.

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Pandemic Priorities – Thinking Ahead To The 2020 Legislative Session Reopening

While our first priority is personal health and then the economic realities of today, we must also at some point soon talk about what comes tomorrow.

There is the “here and now” conversation of social distancing, travel bans, quarantines and the fundamental need to just stay at home. By now, most of us get it and we are staying home if able to do so.

Personally, I am ready to move on and accept that there are enough cooks in the kitchen. When there is a capacity for expanded statewide testing, I’m confident that the decision will be made. As the government can develop further rules on better enforcing the mandatory quarantine I am likewise sure that will happen. Banging on those in power trying to do their best only makes things worse. Likewise, hating on people just because they are driving a rental car or don’t look local, or have pulled over to look at the ocean is unacceptable.

We are better than this. Each of us needs to take another deep breath and remember yet once again, that we are all in this together.

The immediate task before us is taking care of our personal health, and the health of the greater community. That boils down to staying home. If we must go out to work or do essential tasks, we must take the appropriate steps to social distance, wash our hands, etc.

Following close behind protecting our health, is managing as best we can the economic realities of the moment. Again, we need to remember we are all in this together. If you are a renter who has lost their job, reach out and talk to your landlord. If you are a landlord, offer help if you can to your tenant and then likewise reach out to the bank who is awaiting your mortgage payment.

If you have lost your job or had to close your business, or if you need help just to pay your bills or put food on the table – you should do the research and apply now for the help that is available. If you are not sure where to start, let your friends and neighbors know of your situation. Someone I am sure will step up to help. After all, that is how we roll.

It’s time now for the mortgage industry to simply reduce interest rates on existing mortgages, without forcing all to go through the refinance process. Ditto for credit card interest and student loans. While loan forbearance is helpful, temporarily deferring monthly payments, is not enough. The federal government is shoveling trillions of dollars into the financial markets to keep them viable, that help must be directed also to the interest rates being charged on consumer debt and residential mortgages.

Soon we must engage the post-pandemic public policy #pppp conversation. At some point, the 2020 legislative session will reopen. When this happens we as a community must ensure that key “moving forward” issues are addressed with the urgency they deserve.

The knee jerk legislative reaction to kickstarting the economy will be to invest in construction projects and reboot the visitor industry. Both must be done, but both must be done with mindfulness. We need a massive investment in basic infrastructure and affordable housing. We also need to support our friends and family in the visitor industry. But we need limits on growth, the industry must pay its fair share, and future visitors must be better informed as to the importance of respecting both our culture and our special places.

Construction and visitor jobs must be supported, but the current situation calls for much more.

The fragility of our “supply chain” and the need for food self-sufficiency has never been so apparent. We must attack this challenge with the commitment it deserves.

With the wide availability of modern communication technology, there is no legitimate excuse to continue delaying the opportunity for meaningful public participation in state government, regardless of where you live. We need “remote testimony” capability now.

Finally – Now is not the time to balance the state budget on the backs of the most economically vulnerable. Hard-earned and much-deserved tax credits and modest incremental wage increases must be preserved and in fact, expanded. 

When the 2020 legislative session eventually is called back to order, these issues (and others) must be addressed with the urgency they deserve. This is not the time for our legislature to hunker down, do only the basics and wait for the storm to pass. To the contrary, this is when we need them the most and I’m hopeful that leadership in the House and the Senate will, in fact, rise to the occasion.

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Breaking Bad – True confessions on my 9th day of almost self-isolation

Gotta confess I have mostly but not completely stayed home during these past 9 days. Today I went to the Big Save and to Times supermarkets with a short but challenging honey-do list (but never was able to find eggs or toilet paper). I also filled up the truck with gas and got a little cash from the ATM.

I kept my distance from everyone, was very conscious of what I touched, used my debit card (not cash), and washed my hands immediately afterward.

Other than that, I have been home this past week…except for that one afternoon when I could not resist driving to Koloa and visiting my 3-year-old grandson Rixon, son Dylan and daughter-in-law Leeona. I just could not stay away and convinced myself that as long as we did not get too close, that it would be ok. Some will say I was irresponsible and risked both getting my family sick and getting myself sick, and the guilt and tangible harm that could result.

But I did what I did, feeling at the moment that so long as we kept the social distancing in place and refrained from touching and hugging or close contact, that it was safe. We were mostly outdoors around a picnic table, under a tree with a barbecue and cooler nearby.

I went for two hours without touching my grandson and then had one small lapse in judgment. Rixon and I were standing next to each other (a few feet apart) when in what is a time-honored crude and juvenile male type of tradition…I extended my finger to him and asked him to pull it.

With his eyes as big as saucers and with just a tiny bit of hesitation, he reached over grabbed my finger firmly and pulled hard. I will not go into further detail as to what occurred next, but at that moment we both erupted in full-throated laughter and giggles. It was seriously one of those times neither of us will ever forget. Should, however, either of us now fall ill, I am not so sure how funny it will remain, but the moment cannot be taken back.

So, besides going a bit stir crazy now and again (as evidenced here), I remain mostly self-quarantined at home. As mentioned in an earlier column I am not sick, have no symptoms of any kind and to my knowledge, I have not been exposed to Covid-19. I’m staying home because it seems like the right thing to do, and because as a person of relative privilege, I can.

As to the question of whether or not I would ever ask my granddaughter Isabella who is just slightly younger than Rixon to participate in the same crude (some would say disgusting) ritual as I did with Rixon—-What do you think? Shield the sweet little girl or treat both grandchildren equally, regardless of their gender?

Note: This blog post was scrutinized prior to making it public by several friends and the initial reaction was mixed – but all agreed it made them laugh. My purpose in writing the post was both to make people smile but also confess to my lack of discipline in breaking my self-imposed quarantine, and acknowledge the bad judgment. I understand also that “flatulence humor” may be seen by some as unseemly. But hey…I can blame this on being stir crazy, a temporary lapse in good judgment and/or on being retired and being able to do and say what I like, or on my interest in expanding my writing…or whatever 😉

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Reflections on Covid-19, Kauai County leadership and the future

Kauai Mayor Derek Kawakami should be commended for his leadership in guiding Kauai County through these past very difficult few weeks. His daily updates have provided a calm, consistent and reassuring message that appropriate measures are being put into place to limit the impacts of the Covid-19 pandemic.

While I initially wondered about the evening curfew that was put into place, I understand the importance of sending an early message to visitors and residents of the need to stay home. The closing of the farmers’ markets also have raised questions, but I know clearly that these decisions were not undertaken lightly and are constantly under review.

I especially appreciate our Mayor has not overtly criticized or publicly “piled on” Governor Ige, second-guessing as to whether or not his decision-making has been aggressive enough. Whether or not such criticism is deserved, there is a point when this type of conversation is not helpful and in fact, is counter-productive. I believe that we crossed this point a few days ago.

Moving forward is where our collective energy should be focussed. What do we do next?

A huge infusion of economic support is coming very soon to local residents and businesses. The State Department of Labor is working 24/7 to manage the influx of unemployment insurance requests and has announced all applications will be “backdated” to compensate for the temporary system breakdown, which has been so frustrating for so many.

Contained within the multiple economic stimulus packages being passed by the U.S. Congress are measures to increase both the amount of the weekly unemployment benefit and the length of time the benefits will be paid. There will also be direct cash payments deposited into almost everyone’s bank account. While the exact amount has not yet been determined, it’s without a doubt that a cash infusion to individuals and families, will soon be on its way.

For those who have recently lost their jobs, the help and the money cannot come fast enough.

Everyone is in the same boat. From newly unemployed individuals renting a single room in a house, to now closed large retail stores renting huge commercial space in shopping centers. Everyone is either paying rent or mortgage payments, and those receiving the rent and mortgage payments are all likewise using those funds to pay their bills.

The economic circle of debt and dependence is locked in, and the result is complete interdependence. In a disaster such as this, no-one can afford to foreclose or evict as there is no-one to replace that income stream. Consequently, there will be many measures in place to limit or block foreclosures and evictions. After all, they can’t foreclose and evict all of us!

The truth is the economic disruption while severe and extremely disruptive is temporary. The heartbreaking reality for those perhaps already stretched to their limit before the arrival of Covid-19 is that even if temporary, they will get pushed over the edge and lose everything. But for most of us, I believe we are in the midst of temporary hardship. An incredibly stressful hardship, but temporary – and necessary for the greater good.

For what it’s worth, I believe the worse will be over relatively soon. Approximately 3 months after the first outbreak, new cases of Covid-19 in China have been dropping slowly but steadily over the past few weeks. Restaurants in the hardest-hit areas are starting to reopen and economic activity is slowly restarting.

Following this pattern, we should likewise be turning the corner in 3 months or so. At some point, the hotels, restaurants and related businesses will then gradually start reopening. Airlines will begin reinstating previously canceled flights and our local economy will start climbing back to health. The economic recovery will take some time, but a year from now will feel much more like normal, than the uncertainty and stress we are all feeling now.

While no one can accurately predict what will come next, we can do our best to create the future we want for ourselves. We can and should be redoubling our efforts to achieve true food self-sufficiency. Likewise, it’s way past time to make economic diversification a reality and not just a buzz word. And during the coming blur of actions and activity that accompany all disasters and the subsequent rush to recovery, we must always remember three things: This too shall pass, the sun always comes up the next day and we are all in this together.

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Emergency Declaration suspends environmental, land use, planning laws

From Donna Wong, Hawaii 1,000 Friends – “While citing the need to take all precautions to prevent Coronavirus-19 from spreading, which I agree is critical the Governor in his Supplemental Proclamation has suspended HRS 91 Sunshine Law, HRS 92 Public agency meetings and records, HRS 92F Uniform Information Practices Act, HRS 343 EIS, HRS 171 Public lands, management and disposition, 2HRS 205 Land Use Commission, and HRS 205A Coastal Zone Management until May 15.

No explanation is given as to why environmental and planning laws 343, 205 and 205A, and 171 are suspended during this HEALTH emergency.

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The self-isolation blues – #separationanxiety

Today is my 6th day of voluntary self-isolation. I am not sick, have no symptoms of any kind and to my knowledge, I have not been exposed to Covid-19. I’m staying home because it seems like the right thing to do, and because as a person of relative privilege, I can.

Technically I am in the high-risk category due to being over 65 (just barely). Importantly, I have a history of respiratory issues. My birth father, who was a heavy smoker, died from complications relating to emphysema before he reached the age of 60. Every few years I contract chronic bronchitis, walking pneumonia or other similar type lung ailments.

Further complicating my situation and decision-making is the fact that my wife Claudette works in Lihue as a customer services agent for United Airlines. She is in contact daily with hundreds of travelers from throughout the world traveling to and from Kauai.

So while I am a high-risk potential victim of Covid-19, Claudette is a high-risk potential transmitter.

No, my self-isolation does not include staying away from my wife. However, because of the dual high-risk nature of our situation, it makes sense for me to stay home.

I made a trip to the bank yesterday stopping briefly at the 7-11 to buy a small container of half and half, consciously practicing appropriate social distancing the entire time. Beyond that I’ve remained at home, on the computer mostly, catching up on correspondence while compulsively watching the news and monitoring social media.

I am missing my 3-year-old grandson Rixon, terribly. He lives only a short distance away but I am torn as to whether the “social distancing” thing and the “dual high risk” situation mean that the responsible thing for me to do is also stay away from him, my son Dylan and daughter-in-law Leeona.

My daughter Kelli-Rose, her husband Justin and granddaughter Isabella, are presently in Japan where they await transfer to New Jersey. That separation is unavoidable and so easier to accept. But consciously choosing not to visit and hug little Rixon, is a tough pill to swallow (no pun intended).

A few days ago, my self-isolation resolve was at its breaking point and I made a decision to drive to Koloa for a visit, and yes, a likely hug. But the rains descended upon our island and driving through the storm did not make sense.

The question still plagues me though (still yet another unintended pun). Is the fear, the reality, and the risk actually so significant that I must stay away from those I love? gh

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