by exploited » Fri Mar 27, 2020 12:21 pm
To be fair, almost nobody, with the exception of the Scandinavians, keeps an adequate supply of emergency materials just laying around for the next pandemic. So to some extent I don't find the lack of preparedness, as of January 1, to be problematic. It was problematic only to the extent that healthcare is problematic in your country - in my case, severe underfunding of the public health system, in your case, the world's cruelest joke of a public health system.
The reaction after something like this appears is what matters.
I should also point out that there is no reason why modern Western societies cannot pump out an adequate supply with only a bit of advanced notice. It is merely a matter of directing it to be done. So probably the biggest correction should be better detection, testing and way, way more funding for international health orgs. Pumping out stuff like ventilators and hospital beds and masks is something that could easily be done in a couple months, given sufficient planning and processes. Retooling is expensive but the manufacturing and industrial and engineering capacity of our societies is staggering and disturbingly underutilized in situations like this.