The U.S. Isn’t Ready for What’s About to Happen

Even with a robust government response to the novel coronavirus, many people will be in peril. And the United States is anything but prepared.

The Atlantic
The Atlantic

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An employee disinfecting a bus as a measure to prevent the spread of the COVID-2019 coronavirus in Tbilisi, Georgia, March 1, 2020. Photo: The Press Office of the Tbilisi City Hall/TASS via Getty Images

By Juliette Kayyem

For the professionals who try to manage homeland-security threats, reassuring the public after a natural disaster or terrorist attack — or amid a coronavirus outbreak like the one the world now faces — is just part of the job. I am a former federal and state homeland-security official. I study safety and resiliency issues in an academic setting, advise companies on their emergency-response plans, and trade ideas with people in public health, law enforcement, and many other disciplines. Since the beginning of the disease now known as COVID-19, I’ve also been receiving more and more text messages from nervous relatives and friends. The rash decisions that panic breeds have never made any emergency better. So like many others in my field, I’ve been urging people, in as calm a tone as I can muster, to listen to experts and advising them about concrete steps they can take to keep their families, communities, and businesses safe. Wash your hands. Don’t touch your face. Avoid large gatherings. Don’t panic, and prepare as best you can.

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