SuperMatt
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I glanced at the number for COVID deaths (average) for Feb 2. 2,658 for America, 10,466 for the world. America has over 25% of COVID deaths, and less than 5% of the world’s population (~330 million out of ~7.5 billion). What a disaster.
While a bunch of far-right nuts scream that vaccine mandates are equivalent to the Holocaust, Austria‘s parliament is finalizing a law to mandate vaccines for everybody. Germany may follow suit.
Why are some countries handling the pandemic far better than others? One study indicates the answer might be: how much people trust their own government.
(paywall removed)
While a bunch of far-right nuts scream that vaccine mandates are equivalent to the Holocaust, Austria‘s parliament is finalizing a law to mandate vaccines for everybody. Germany may follow suit.
Austria’s sweeping Covid vaccine mandate is becoming law. (Published 2022)
The measure requires almost everyone 18 or over to be vaccinated against the coronavirus, a wider-ranging mandate than any other European country has yet imposed.
www.nytimes.com
Why are some countries handling the pandemic far better than others? One study indicates the answer might be: how much people trust their own government.
(paywall removed)
Before 2020, Vietnam looked particularly vulnerable to a pandemic. The Southeast Asian country, a single-party state with nearly 100 million people, scored low on international assessments of universal health coverage and had relatively few hospital beds for its population, as well as a closed-off political system.
Instead, Vietnam emerged as an early pandemic success story. Long after the coronavirus began to spread in neighboring China, Vietnam maintained low levels of infections and fatalities even as wealthy countries with more robust health systems, including the United States and much of Europe, struggled.
A new study of pandemic preparedness across 177 countries and territories appears to have found a key element in Vietnam’s success: trust.
Thomas Bollyky, one of the study’s authors, said Vietnam should have failed in the fight against the coronavirus, according to traditional tenets of preparedness.