Mon 09 March 2020:
Drinking alcohol or bleach, shaving beards, and taking vitamin supplements are some things people have tried to protect themselves from coronavirus as misinformation becomes one of the biggest issues faced by countries as they assess pandemic preparedness in the digital age.
According to a World Health Organization study, only 95 countries had publicly available pandemic preparedness plans out of 194 countries analyzed. In the Middle East, Saudi Arabia, Oman, Yemen, Jordan and Egypt have publicly available strategies to deal with an infectious disease outbreak.
Preparedness has to begin at the top and flow down to lower entities, and having one universal message across the board is essential, Dr. Marie-Louise Van Eck, regional medical director for the Middle East and North Africa and International SOS, a medical and travel security services firm, said.
Global preparedness
But even with recent outbreaks, such as the 2009 H1N1 influenza pandemic, the world isn’t learning from past pandemics and is no better prepared to handle an outbreak than it was 10 years ago, Blackburn said.
Today, preparedness may be more important as ever. As the world becomes increasingly interconnected, the chance of a new global pandemic outbreak rises.
“We are always only one flight away from an infectious disease that spreads, or one flight away from a potential epidemic,” said Van Eck.
Would you look at that.
Not only is chlorine dioxide (aka “MMS”) an effective cancer cell killer, it can wipe out coronavirus too.
No wonder YouTube has been censoring basically every single video where I discuss it over the last year.
Big Pharma wants you ignorant. https://t.co/7cqmyUxcXY
— Jordan Sather (@Jordan_Sather_) January 23, 2020
Plans in place
Beyond that, everyone at all levels must be willing to adopt the orders passed down.
In all countries, health care workers are the first line of defense and they must be given the needed tools to respond from the top, Van Eck said.
The WHO report global pandemic readiness read, “A moderate or severe influenza pandemic will test the limits of resilience of nations, companies, and communities, depending on their capacity to respond. No single agency or organization can prepare for a pandemic on its own. Inadequate or uncoordinated preparedness of interdependent public and private organizations will reduce the ability of the health sector to respond during a pandemic.”
Readying economies to take the hit
Businesses need to get “all the stakeholders involved, make sure they monitor the situation, keep very close contact with the local authorities, understand what the travel restrictions and bans are and know where your suppliers are coming from as well,” Van Eck said. Stockpiling of necessary supplies to ensure business flow continues may also be necessary.
In terms of economic impact and supply chain interruptions, it is much too early to predict future disruptions, Van Eck said.
Individuals though have already started stockpiling certain goods, like toilet paper, and disruptions to supply chains could mean shortages of these goods down the line.
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