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CDC To Restructure After COVID Failure, 'Confusing and Overwhelming' Guidance (arstechnica.com) 277

After persistent and often harsh criticism for its handling of the COVID-19 pandemic and now the monkeypox emergency, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention will undergo a significant overhaul, involving cultural and structural changes aimed at realizing its prior reputation as the world's premier public health agency. From a report: "For 75 years, CDC and public health have been preparing for COVID-19, and in our big moment, our performance did not reliably meet expectations," CDC Director Rochelle Walensky said in an email to CDC's 11,000-person staff Wednesday, which was seen by The New York Times and Stat News. "My goal is a new, public health action-oriented culture at CDC that emphasizes accountability, collaboration, communication, and timeliness."

Though the CDC endured meddling and undermining during the Trump administration, many of the agency's pandemic misfires were unforced errors -- such as the failure to stand up reliable SARS-CoV-2 testing in the early days and muddled messaging on masks. In a meeting with senior staff Wednesday, Walensky made a startling acknowledgement of the failures while outlining the overhaul in broad strokes. The cultural changes appear aimed at stamping out pedantic data analyses that have slowed and hampered the agency's public health responses. A briefing document provided to the Times said the goal is for CDC staff to "produce data for action" as opposed to "data for publication." As such, the agency will cut down on the time allowed to review studies before they're released. The agency will also change the way it grants promotions to staff, placing more emphasis on public health impact rather than the number of scientific publications.

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CDC To Restructure After COVID Failure, 'Confusing and Overwhelming' Guidance

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  • by swell ( 195815 ) <jabberwock@poetic.com> on Wednesday August 17, 2022 @02:54PM (#62797889)

    Has anyone anywhere ever caught COVID because they didn't wash their hands? Yet the warning persists- wash your hands! A whole industry grew up distributing alcohol based hand cleaners. As far as I can tell there has never been evidence of transmission via dirty hands, and yet the official warning remains. How is this any different from the bad advice offered by the former president? Shouldn't there be some science behind CDC recommendations?

    • by FriendOfBagu ( 770778 ) on Wednesday August 17, 2022 @03:27PM (#62798031)

      How is this any different from the bad advice offered by the former president?

      Because washing your hands is, at worst, harmless, unlike ingesting Ivermectin.

    • by Darinbob ( 1142669 ) on Wednesday August 17, 2022 @03:30PM (#62798043)

      Meh. My friend regularly washes his hands, before the pandemic. OCD? Not really, just washes them after touching public surfaces, before touching food, etc. And yet he annoys us by reminding us that the's not had the flu in thirty years. I think there's a likely connection there.

      I don't understand the MAGA hatred for this given that Trump is the biggest germ phobe out there and regularly does the handwashing, I'd have thought they'd be first in line to emulate it.

    • by XXongo ( 3986865 )

      Has anyone anywhere ever caught COVID because they didn't wash their hands?

      Pretty much not. Turns out transmission is respiratory. That was figured out relatively quickly in the epidemic, but it took a long time for the "transmission is mostly airborne" to shift to "transmission is almost entirely airborne, and then for that information to filter down. Here's the WHO information [who.int] as of July 9 2020, about 6 months after the first cases (note that "fomite" refers to viral contamination of surfaces) "Despite consistent evidence as to SARS-CoV-2 contamination of surfaces and the surv

    • by RobinH ( 124750 )
      I have to give the CDC some leniency because it was a new virus with a dearth of information, and new research, sometimes contradictory, was accumulating constantly. Hand washing is kind of a gimme because it can't hurt, and it helps control other known pathogens, so it'll help reduce strain on health care. At the beginning they just didn't know if it could be transmitted that way. I personally wish they'd just have said that outright. But I also get that the average person can't tolerate a public healt
    • Washing your hands offers good protection against disease transmission. How stupid do you have to be to believe that message a conspiracy on the part of Big Soap to get you to buy their products?
    • by tlhIngan ( 30335 )

      Handwashing is less about keeping hands clean, and more like not accidentally causing ingestion of diseases through vulnerable membranes.

      The most common way to get infected is not having a dirty hand, but touching that dirty hand against something on you that can't handle it - like your eyes.

      Rubbing your eyes is something lots of people do, and for many, it's an involuntary habit that they will touch their eyes to rub something out of it. It's an incredibly difficult habit to break, and it's why it's a prim

  • This concerns me (Score:5, Insightful)

    by Pollux ( 102520 ) <speter@[ ]ata.net.eg ['ted' in gap]> on Wednesday August 17, 2022 @02:59PM (#62797911) Journal

    The cultural changes appear aimed at stamping out pedantic data analyses that have slowed and hampered the agency's public health responses. ...the goal is for CDC staff to "produce data for action" as opposed to "data for publication." As such, the agency will cut down on the time allowed to review studies before they're released.

    For me, I like well-researched information flowing out of a scientific institution like the CDC. We depend on their scientific authority, especially in order to counter the information warfare that exists when particular presidents start saying that drinking bleach is a viable means of fighting COVID. Their authority depends on their information being as accurate as possible If the CDC starts spewing out "data for action" that screws up the science and sends everyone scurrying in the wrong direction, they will lose that authority and won't be able to get it back.

    In this age of information warfare, the CDC should behave less like an infantryman and more like a sniper. We don't need a hail of information being fired at us; need targeted and accurate messages that won't miss their mark.

    • by poptix ( 78287 )

      Sure, but at the beginning of a pandemic we don't have time to perform a year long double blind case study on the efficacy of wearing masks. In all the time they've had to study previous pandemics they should have some basic messaging about transmission vectors, sanitation, warning the old and infirm that they're at higher risk, etc. Instead we got a lot of confused messaging and mask mandates (which they should have known would backfire, like any other mandate).

      I also expect the CDC to have strategic suppl

  • by bb_matt ( 5705262 ) on Wednesday August 17, 2022 @03:00PM (#62797915)

    What the CDC are facing is just a symptom of lack of leadership across the board.

    Where I live, in the UK, we had the same lack of leadership as the US did during the pandemic - we're right up there in the league tables with our friends across the pond.

    Populism has overtaken leadership and grand visions.

    We have morons for leaders, pretty much. Narcissists.
    Our next Prime Minister could be the mobile toting selfie-queen know as Lizz Truss, a "pound shop thatcher" - devoid of any original thought and any concern over anything but herself.

    What we have experienced in the UK over the last few decades, mirrors the US - our governments are no longer in control in any shape or form.
    They are beholden to "big money" - it's all about the revolving door, from politics into a fancy high paying corporate role - and the other way around.

    Our governments are no longer about the people they are supposed to serve, but rather about serving corporate profit - it's that simple.

    What the CDC have experienced, is a side-effect of that lack of leadership.

    Revolution beckons - but will probably be nipped at the bud by civilisation collapse due to climate breakdown anyway.

    Choose your poison, get prepping - the end of this civilisation is coming very soon...

    • by bussdriver ( 620565 ) on Wednesday August 17, 2022 @04:04PM (#62798177)

      Stupid voters get a government that reflects themselves!

      "As democracy is perfected, the office of president represents, more and more closely, the inner soul of the people. On some great and glorious day the plain folks of the land will reach their heart's desire at last and the White House will be adorned by a downright moron."
      -Henry Louis Mencken; On Politics: A Carnival of Buncombe

      • by Pascoea ( 968200 )

        Stupid voters get a government that reflects themselves!

        Given the average reading level in the US, it's not hard to see why this works.

    • People used to complain about Tony Blair. Compared to what we have now, Tony seems like a genius.

    • The success or failure of an organization is never about policies, procedures, goals, wishes, hopes, or dreams. It's about people. The CDC gave us terrible, conflicting advice, and they did so consistently. In fact, they're still doing it.

      Why? Because we have the wrong people working there. If you don't find better people, you won't get better results, it's really just that simple.

      This latest effort is doomed to failure from the start because the people who failed us so completely are the exact, same people

    • by dstwins ( 167742 )
      I would slightly disagree... (and you can even look at what they are doing in response to COVID).

      The issue the CDC had was, they are used to passing data onto people who then would take appropriate action.

      The typical chain was; CDC (Produced Data supporting a conclusion and passes this data on to other groups and countries to re-confirm the conclusions or help in refining the data so its more detailed) => Goes to political aggregators (Health and Human Services of the US Government who would propose a
  • by DigitalSorceress ( 156609 ) on Wednesday August 17, 2022 @04:01PM (#62798165)

    The part where they really failed was the social science.

    They deliberately downplayed masks when they had information that masks would be a good idea because tjhey worried about gougers/hoarders - and yeah that was a concern, but by giving bad info they fed the fires of the anti-maskers

    When the CDC announced that fully vaccinated people were OK to go without masks ... they were failing to consider that the unvaccinated who were already ignoring mask mandates or who reluctantly masked up - would immediately unmask as well - they should have held off removing the mandates till it was epidemiologically safe for everyone to stop masking - and with the variants about - honestly that time has not yet come.

  • by HiThere ( 15173 ) <charleshixsn@@@earthlink...net> on Wednesday August 17, 2022 @04:04PM (#62798179)

    People want simple right answers. When something new comes along, the right answers aren't known, and even relatively simple advice gets reinterpreted by PR flacks.

    E.g. "Save the N95 masks for those who will be most exposed" got watered down to "don't use masks". And lots of people *still* believe that "don't use masks" was the real message.

    • Re:It can't work. (Score:5, Insightful)

      by steveha ( 103154 ) on Wednesday August 17, 2022 @06:16PM (#62798611) Homepage

      "Save the N95 masks for those who will be most exposed" got watered down to "don't use masks". And lots of people *still* believe that "don't use masks" was the real message.

      Not so fast. I was there too, and I remember Dr. Fauci saying, in effect, that masks don't work. Later, when everyone (including him) was saying that masks do work and we all needed to wear a mask in public, he justified his anti-mask comments by saying that he was worried about hoarding, and wanted the masks left for people who needed them.

      Scott Adams was saying at the time that in his opinion the "masks don't work" comments were obvious lies, and that probably they were worried about hoarding. With the benefit of hindsight I think Scott Adams nailed it.

      Reasonable people can disagree on whether Dr. Fauci actually lied. I think his guidance was so misleading as to count as a lie, but you may think otherwise.

      IMHO it would have been better to straightforwardly tell the truth. "Masks are not 100% effective but they will help slow the spread. We want everyone to wear a mask if possible, but right this moment masks are in short supply, and we ask everyone to leave the N95 masks for those who really need them."

      IMHO giving anti-mask guidance made many people distrustful of the advice they were given after the guidance switched to pro-mask. "If they were lying to us about masks, why should I trust them on anything?"

      https://reason.com/2021/06/04/anthony-fauci-may-not-have-lied-about-face-masks-but-he-was-not-exactly-honest-either/ [reason.com]

  • At first we genuinely didn't know what we were dealing with. Now we do.

    Long after we had the information we needed the media and government continued with the OMG WERE ALL GOING TO DIE narrative, regardless of what the data said. Yes, people died. Few died of COVID, most died with COVID. A difference. The vast majority were in well-defined risk groups - if you're fat or old or already have lung issues COVID will fuck you up - but we shut down our entire society anyway. Why? Was it worth it?

    COVID is no j

  • A briefing document provided to the Times said the goal is for CDC staff to "produce data for action" as opposed to "data for publication." As such, the agency will cut down on the time allowed to review studies before they're released.

    One of the core issues with CDC's "response" is they were running around like a code monkeys eager to ship their wares the second they could get it to compile. Doubling down on more of the same is to say the least counterproductive.

    What the CDC should do is have all studies properly peer reviewed prior to release and avoid confusing "science" with "policy" especially when addressing the public.

    When I see CDC products publishing figures out of line with or directly contradicted by preexisting studies this i

  • The CDC contradicted themselves so much that they were a source of misinformation. Sometimes you could quote their guidance and have your content removed from sites like Twitter for being misinformation! Or you could go to sites like Ars Technica and get beat up by a bunch of jerks who evidently were taught in school that you should just trust whatever the people on TV are telling you.

"What man has done, man can aspire to do." -- Jerry Pournelle, about space flight

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