Tuesday, September 8, 2009

The Disaster Is The Planning

I've railed on this site before about the ridiculous amounts of money poured down the drain since 9/11 in the quest for "preparedness."
A whole industry has sprung up over the last 8 years dedicated to something, although what that something is I'm not completely sure.
Across my own little corner of the public safety universe legions of trailers, stacks of portable radios, pallets of tents, spacesuits, PAPRs, AV-2000s, and enough Tyvek material to encircle the Earth stand ready to protect central Massachusetts from the forces of evil who are conspiring to destroy us.
But meanwhile the people who would presumably use that equipment to keep us safe are being laid off due to budget cuts.
As disaster preparedness money has appeared in such abundance that no one really knows what to spend it on anymore, real-world public health experts are being discarded because the cash to pay for THEM has dried up.
But I have to wonder, in the end, what's going to protect me and my family -- a comprehensive vaccination program and a robust public health department to ensure the population is protected, or a bunch of bureaucratic hacks in color-coordinated polo shirts and khaki trousers "working" from grant to grant without producing anything that will actually save a single life?
I did some work briefly for a local Medical Reserve Corps who's biggest concern was purchasing an ID system for its volunteers, and what color duffle bag to hand out to its workers.
We got Polo shirts AND a fleece vest.
I didn't last long.
It's all very worrisome to me, and now it appears that an MIT doctoral student has published a paper that supports my concern.
In it, MIT PhD candidate Peter Doshi suggests that so-called "pandemic flu" planning has actually made us less ready for a real breakout of a flu epidemic like that one in 1918 that killed 50 to 100 million people worldwide, depending on who's estimate you believe.
It's an interesting read.
I think it's time for a little common sense when it comes to preparing for disasters.
You can't just throw money at the problem -- the people who catch the most cash are rarely the ones who can do a darn thing to help us.

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