A crisis response expert weighs in on emerging infectious diseases — and how the COVID-19 pandemic should be a wake-up call to begin preparing now. By Dr. Michael Manyak
Nine months ago, a global enterprise I work with used its substantial resources to simulate the widespread outbreak of an infectious illness. Using our knowledge and experience, as well as publicly available research, we modeled a fictional disease whose behavior turned out to be eerily similar to that of COVID-19. I’m pleased to say that when the coronavirus pandemic struck, that enterprise was far better prepared than most, as it had established policies around notifying employees, working from home and more. What’s not at all pleasing, however, is how few businesses, nations and other entities were similarly prepared. Along with my medical colleagues, security experts and the intelligence community, I’ve been concerned about a COVID-19-style pandemic for the better part of a decade. Unfortunately, the coronavirus will not be the last of its ilk. With the world focused on infectious disease, now is the time to raise awareness of (and prepare for) what’s to come, notably the following:
If the death toll from the swine flu, just over a decade ago, surprises you, you’re not alone — and that’s my point. More than ever, we live in the world of the now. COVID-19 is the only story in the news, and I hear and read universal agreement that once we get a handle on this crisis (and we will), everything will be different. The world will have changed. Lessons will have been learned. I hope that’s true, but I’ve seen the opposite too many times. The crisis passes. Urgency fades. A fresh emergency arises. Resources that once seemed essential are redistributed. I hope and pray that’s not the case this time. Let the coronavirus be the wakeup call that compels us to prepare for, while also striving to prevent, the next pandemic. This article was written by Dr. Michael Manyak, author, urologist and corporate medical executive. Read more about Michael.