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Fauci: COVID-19 burnout unprecedented

Article

The NIAID head said the COVID-19 pandemic has highlighted the impact of professional dissatisfaction and fatigue.

Anthony Fauci, MD, director of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases (NIAID), says that the COVID-19 pandemic must change the way the healthcare industry addresses burnout.

Fauci was taking part in a question-and-answer session during the opening plenary of the American College of Physicians (ACP) Internal Medicine Meeting 2021 along with Gregory Kane, MD, treasurer of ACP; and Darilyn Moyer, MD, executive vice president and CEO of ACP.

He said the pandemic has created a grueling situation for healthcare professionals unlike any seen before.

“This is an experience the likes of which no other generation of physicians and health care providers, nurses and others involved in the health care system (has been through), and never had the opportunity to go through; thank goodness,” he said. “So we have to be very creative in figuring out ways how we address this unprecedented experience that our healthcare providers have been through.”

When asked whether COVID-19 could be eradicated globally, Fauci seemed more confident that it will be eradicated in some countries and controlled in others, but the process will take years and vaccinating a large portion of the world’s population.

“We're going to be continually threatened by variants that will come from other countries, which tells us the obvious solution to that is to make sure that we get the entire world vaccinated against (COVID-19),” Fauci said. “Until we do that, I don't think we're going to eliminate this infection. I think it'll be there at a low level; we'll be protected. We may need to get boosted every once in a while, to keep the level of protection up. But we have to look at it as a global problem, otherwise, we're never going to truly eliminate it.”

Fauci said that early in the pandemic the U.S.’s response was hamstrung by the dismantling of the local health infrastructure, failure to mobilize the private sector early for diagnostics, and the rapidly evolving situation with little transparency from China. The transmission method of the virus also caught the world by surprise.

“We've never had any pathogen of any note of seriousness in which … 50 and 60 percent of the transmissions occur from a person who never will get symptomatic, or who was in the pre-symptomatic stage,” he said. “That broke all the paradigms of infectious disease because, prior to that, transmissions were always a little bit asymptomatic but dominated by the symptomatic person.”

As for the U.S.’s successes in responding to the pandemic, Fauci highlighted the Trump administration’s Operation Warp Speed which invested billions in vaccine development and pre-purchase as well as the Biden administration’s rollout of the vaccines.

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