Biden administration bungled America’s response to the monkeypox epidemic, ignoring the lessons of the coronavirus pandemic

Biden administration bungled America’s response to the monkeypox epidemic, ignoring the lessons of the coronavirus pandemic
Child with monkeypox

The Biden administration bungled its response to the monkeypox epidemic, and has not distributed enough vaccines to high-risk people to prevent its further spread. People weren’t tested for the disease, when they clearly needed to be tested. As a result, monkeypox is spreading undetected. The World Health Organization says that monkeypox has a fatality rate of 3-6%, and it can leave scars.

The Washington Post reports that “public health experts, including within the Biden administration, are increasingly concerned that the federal government’s handling of the largest-ever U.S. monkeypox outbreak is mirroring its cumbersome response to the coronavirus pandemic 2½ years ago, with potentially dire consequences. As a result, they said, community transmission is occurring largely undetected, and the critical window in which to control the outbreak is closing quickly.”

The Biden administration does not seem interested in speedy action, judging by its elimination of Operation Warp Speed. That was the Trump-era project that got several coronavirus vaccines approved quickly, in months, rather than the years it usually takes to approve a vaccine. Soon after Biden took office, his administration ended Operation Warp Speed, and forced out its architect, a leading vaccine researcher and expert. The demise of Operation Warp Speed means that it will be harder to develop and approve vaccines for new variants and mutations of monkeypox.

Public health experts are daunted by the spread of monkeypox, which reminds them of how the coronavirus got out of control. It has been like “January 2020 all over again,” says the University of Nebraska’s Lauren Sauer, director of the Special Pathogens Research Network. More than 150 monkeypox cases were identified in the United States over the course of a month, but a far higher number of cases have gone undetected.

The Washington Post says that even “as other nations have ramped up their efforts to track and prevent the spread of infection, experts say the United States has moved too slowly to expand access to monkeypox testing and vaccinate people at highest risk.” And the “plodding U.S. response so far raises doubts about the country’s preparedness for the next pandemic, some administration officials say.” The Post quotes Professor Sauer as saying that “communication about whom to test, when to test them and what monkeypox symptoms look like has been dismal.”

This failure is baffling, because, “unlike the coronavirus, monkeypox has been studied for decades by global and U.S. experts who know the tools, strategies and vaccine protocols that can limit spread.” Yet, testing criteria are “too narrow and have resulted in long waits for testing,” delaying the identification of positive cases, according to officials and physicians cited by The Post.

The government is repeating the same mistakes it committed in the coronavirus pandemic, learning nothing from past experience: “just as in early 2020, when the coronavirus first menaced the United States, federal officials at first limited monkeypox testing to a network of several dozen public health laboratories — and did not authorize thousands of commercial laboratories and hospitals to perform their own testing, too,” reports The Post.

Federal officials “can’t get their act together on testing; the CDC puts out misleading information; commercial laboratories are underutilized in the early effort to spot cases. America ends up flying blind for months about the extent of community transmission until the virus becomes so prevalent that it can’t be contained. It happened with COVID. It’s happening again with monkeypox,” notes Hot Air.

The result is that many monkeypox cases are going undetected, fueling its spread: “Two federal officials involved in the monkeypox response said there are ‘significantly’ more cases across the United States that are being missed because testing for monkeypox had not been expanded beyond the network of public health laboratories,” reports The Post.

“If we don’t move aggressively now, monkeypox is going to be that much harder to eradicate later — or it could even become endemic” in the United States,” said an unnamed administration official quoted by The Post.

Only around 10 monkeypox tests per day were being administered in our whole country earlier this month, even as other nations like the United Kingdom were doing far more tests, a senior official told The Post. Testing would reveal many more cases: known cases in Britain rose nearly 40 percent in the span of just five days in mid-June.

Two weeks ago, a man sought to be tested in New York City after suffering monkeypox symptoms. But he was told by a doctor that he didn’t need to be tested, even though he had recently returned from Portugal, where he had sex with other men. The Post says that “monkeypox has been spreading mostly among men who have sex with men.” A virologist at New York University said he knew of a dozen other cases in which people with apparent monkeypox symptoms were unable to get tested. “The CDC is very narrowly defining criteria for testing,” so “if you don’t check off on every single one of the boxes, based on CDC, you don’t get access to testing,” he said.

As The Post notes, “Public health experts also have criticized U.S. officials for not proactively vaccinating high-risk individuals against the virus, even as other nations have moved more aggressively to do so. Public health experts and activists are clamoring for more-proactive vaccinations in high-risk communities, warning that the outbreak could be amplified as the gay community celebrates Pride Month.” One gay man described how he had “four close contacts” that he would have avoided if only he had been tested for monkeypox.

This is all very worrisome, because the more people or animals a virus infects, the more chances it has to mutate into something even more contagious. That happened repeatedly with the coronavirus. Now it is occurring with monkeypox, too, according to Newsweek.

The Biden administration has not learned from the government’s past pandemic failures. Federal bureaucrats slowed the fight against COVID-19, until the Trump administration responded with things like Operation Warp Speed, which the Biden administration later ended.

For weeks early in the coronavirus pandemic, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention required that people use only the coronavirus test designed by the CDC itself, not alternative tests, such as those approved by European regulators. The CDC’s own test turned out to be badly flawed. The CDC’s demand for control over testing greatly slowed down detection of the disease. Meanwhile, the CDC and FDA were preventing infectious disease expert Helen Chu from testing samples from many people with symptoms. The FDA refused to approve Chu’s test on the grounds that her lab “was not certified as a clinical laboratory under regulations established by the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services, a process that could take months.” FDA regulations thwarted the manufacturing of high-quality masks and respirators during the pandemic. For a long time, the FDA told at-home diagnostics companies to stop coronavirus test roll-outs. As a result, customers didn’t get their results and were told to destroy their test kits.

These were decisions made by career federal employees, acting with their customary slowness and rigidity. Career FDA employees commonly take years to approve life-saving drugs. That results in the deaths of hundreds of thousands of people who could have been saved by prompt approval of those drugs. For example, at least a hundred thousand people died waiting for the FDA to approve beta blockers.

Hans Bader

Hans Bader

Hans Bader practices law in Washington, D.C. After studying economics and history at the University of Virginia and law at Harvard, he practiced civil-rights, international-trade, and constitutional law. He also once worked in the Education Department. Hans writes for CNSNews.com and has appeared on C-SPAN’s “Washington Journal.” Contact him at hfb138@yahoo.com

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