Public health expert Dr. Ashish Jha argued Friday that “of all the things” former President Donald Trump’s administration got wrong, its prioritization of Americans receiving the COVID-19 vaccine “may be the most wrong they were” about the health crisis and could ultimately contribute to an “endless pandemic.”
“This idea that you could live in a kind of an isolationist world. It doesn’t work, we are way far away from being able to vaccinate the world,” Jha, dean of the Brown University School of Public Health, told MSNBC’s Chris Hayes.
The bottom line is, imagine a world where America is vaccinated but there are large outbreaks happening elsewhere. We can see the rise of variants that will escape our variants and make our entire population vulnerable again. And we would have to lockdown again, we would have to build new vaccines and revaccinate people, and we would have this sort of this endless pandemic.
“We all want to avoid that and the best way to avoid it is to focus on vaccinating everybody around the world,” Jha added.
Michael Osterholm, the director of the Center for Infectious Disease Research and Policy at the University of Minnesota, earlier this week warned the U.S. is entering its “darkest” weeks of the pandemic because of the spread of more contagious variants of the virus that have emerged worldwide.
COVID-19 has now killed more than 436,000 people in the U.S. alone.
Globally, it has claimed 2.2 million lives.
Watch the interview here:
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