Ebola Story Is All About Who, What, Where and Whether To Tell Anybody

Categories: Schutze

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Pretty much always, Americans have found ways to get the scoop on what's really going on.

One great service Dallas could render to the rest of the country, should the dust ever settle on the local Ebola story, would be a thorough, no-holds-barred post mortem on information sharing. I am already hearing from people behind the scenes, speaking off the record, that there has been significant tension between officials on the question of what to tell people, when and how.

And it didn't start here. From the moment the Thomas Eric Duncan story first lit up, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention has preached that risks to the public in this country are minimal, our healthcare system will beat Ebola with a first round knock-out and the most important thing to avoid is public fear. There are some good reasons for preaching that line, but there may also be some unanticipated bad consequences to carrying it too far, illuminated by the Dallas experience.

See also: Even the CDC Isn't Totally Sold on its Own Proclamations on How Ebola Is Transmitted

The first things to acknowledge are the good reasons for not publicly reporting every single twist in the story. If and when the full story can be told, for example, we will learn that there have been numerous incidences of people self-reporting that they have Ebola. In fact people have told authorities in Dallas County in the last week not only that they have Ebola but that they have had contact with Duncan, when neither claim turned out to be true upon subsequent investigation.

I haven't been able to get enough detail from anybody to give me an indication why this is happening. Maybe the people doing this are just mistaken. Maybe they are crazy. Maybe somebody thought he was about to get caught for embezzlement. No telling.

But if it happens with Ebola, it probably happens with every major public health scare. We must assume the CDC knows it will happen, and they are trying to avoid live helicopter coverage for every bank teller who didn't want to show up for work that day.

But we also have to look at the downside when officials deliberately manipulate public awareness. For one thing when the unexpected happens, official messages of absolute mastery and control melt away like a wedding cake left out in the rain. For another, public confidence is gravely eroded whenever the official message has to be retracted and re-stated in a less self-serving light, as when Texas Health Presbyterian had to eat its original version of why the hospital turned Duncan away on his first show-up in the emergency room.

There is also the distinct possibility that a tendency here to over control the release of information and to minimize risk may have contributed to a lack of urgency about the problem. Setting off alarms, after all, is the right thing to do in fires and burglaries, and maybe it's the right thing to do in an epidemic, within reason. It may be that a lack of urgency played a role in mistakes like the one where a bunch of sheriff's deputies marched into Patient Zero's apartment without protective gear. We could have used a little more alarm on that one.

Local officials in Dallas, perhaps struggling to interpret the CDC's basic body language, have had serious disagreements about the public release of basic facts in the Ebola story, I am told by people speaking not for attribution. We're talking about the who, what, when and where of things that are known.

Those officials who have counseled not releasing basic information seem not to understand that in our American society, that basic information will get out anyway, usually pretty quickly in a case like this. That has been true, since ... hmm ... well, at least since 1840 when Alexis de Tocqueville published volume two of Democracy in Americaa," in which he described the typical American as, "in short, a highly civilized being, who consents, for a time, to inhabit the backwoods, and who penetrates into the wilds of the New World with the Bible, an ax, and a file of newspapers."

What we haven't had here -- what we certainly didn't get from the CDC -- is a basic over-arching model for information control. And why, when we are the ones at Ground Zero, would we expect a distant government agency to tell us how to handle urgent developments on our own turf? We need to know, and cities everywhere need to know, what kind of information should be disseminated right away, what kind that needs to be held temporarily for a truth check and what kind probably needs to go straight into the shredder.

Not telling people what's going on is not a viable choice in this country. You can withhold the stupid stuff, as long you're sure it's stupid. You can withhold things like the exposed family's exact location, and people will understand that you are protecting them. But withholding basic information or, goodness knows, fibbing about things? Now that's how you set off a real panic.


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21 comments
TheCredibleHulk
TheCredibleHulk topcommenter

Do you think it really matters? Just reading thru the "man-on-the-street" responses, it's clear that regardless of what information (truth or "managed truth") is released or reported, many people are completely uninformed.

A lot of people will pick up fragmented information from friends or acquaintances, snatches of news broadcasts & sound-bites and then fill in the gaps with their imaginations - it's how we're wired.

You may be able to control the info-flow to a certain extent, but you just can't control human-nature.

lolotehe
lolotehe

I'm never going to be able to see the word "tendency" without thinking of the phrase "a tendency of pundits". 

In my mind, this is a collective noun, like "an exaltation of larks", "a skulk of foxes", or "a conspiracy of coincidences".

ozonelarryb
ozonelarryb

Jim, it is the G's sole purpose in life to peddle the pablum that keeps the populace quiescent. So they must keep all communiques within 1/2 sigma of the approved bullshit.

Often the truth falls outside that range.

everlastingphelps
everlastingphelps topcommenter

Here's an idea -- treat Americans like adults.  Tell us the bad news.  We can handle it and decide how to deal with it individually.


The entire government has an honesty problem.  We need to start shitcanning bureaucrats on the first lie, including lies of omission, They've discovered that it's better to just lie to us and hope for the best, because they know will will do fuck-all about it once it is over.  "Oh, it turns out that you discovered my lie.  I'll take my early retirement and go work in a BS job in the private sector in my industry now."


The government has no credibility because the government isn't credible.

Greg820
Greg820

Jim, a rather broad article with little detail about WHAT basic information you want released.  What, specifically, do you believe needs to be released that hasn't been already?

holmantx
holmantx topcommenter

Houston's emergency response to the last couple of hurricanes was to order involuntary evacuations.  The cops pushed you out and you couldn't come back . . . in order to save lives and not put emergency responders in jeopardy should they have to rescue the drunks riding it out at the bars.

They couldn't stop the looting.

Well, the storms weren't that bad if you had sheltered in place but if you were caught in the gridlock in the LARGEST EVACUATION IN AMERICAN HISTORY, with the other 2 million on the freeways - you had to ride it out in your car.

For two days.  Couldn't go back, couldn't get to Dallas.

Houstonians are a little jaded now.

The moral of that story is, don't lie to people for their own good.  They won't pay attention to you when it does count.

BTW Hannity had an epidemiologist on the radio this afternoon that confirmed this is what the CDC has done nationwide. 

The Al Haig "I'm in control, there's nothing to worry about" rendition in order to not cause panic.




leftocenter
leftocenter

@bvckvs

I thought it was very thought-provoking.  JS has pretty strong creds to be writing for an alt daily...

JimSX
JimSX topcommenter

@ColonelAngus Shorter Oxford English Dictionary, 1973, Incidence; see INCIDENT, 1. = INCIDENT.

wcvemail
wcvemail

@Greg820

I didn't get a plea for any specific information. Rather, I got from this reading a good idea, that of formulating a policy (gotta speak bureaucrat-ese on this one) for information dissemination. Responsibilities, common scenario training, deciding in advance what details to release, etc. I've seen, and had to sign that I'd seen, many such corporate policies.

JimSX
JimSX topcommenter

@holmantx I am sorry. Hannity is not allowed here.

JimSX
JimSX topcommenter

So why not just use INCIDENT? I don't know. Then how would anybody know I own a  copy of the Shorter Oxford English Dictionary?

Greg820
Greg820

@wcvemail I believe they are controlling the message well.  I have no doubt there is disagreement on the inside on what to release and when.  That's what happens when you put human beings together.

holmantx
holmantx topcommenter

@JimSX @holmantx

Yeah I thought you'd get a kick out of that however, the Doc did track your piece in depth.

sorry.

broken clock right twice, etc.

JimSX
JimSX topcommenter

Want to have a shoot-out to see which owns the most older stuff?

wcvemail
wcvemail

@Greg820 @wcvemail

In the last couple of days, I've learned that the CDC officially and explicitly defers to local health authorities, so that's at least one clear policy. That further answers an earlier question from me about the role of the surgeon general, which I've also learned (here on UP! amazing!) is officially just a bully pulpit.

I don't want to excite the usual political knee-jerkers, but it's ironic that some GOP legislators have called for a national Ebola czar, centralizing responsibility in D.C./big government, while ignoring that the CDC defers to local control at the small gov't level.

http://www.nydailynews.com/news/politics/republicans-push-white-house-appoint-ebola-czar-article-1.1965865

JimSX
JimSX topcommenter

@ColonelAngus @JimSX

Damn right! I knew there was something good about this condition.

ColonelAngus
ColonelAngus

@JimSX  "

Want to have a shoot-out to see which owns the most older stuff?"


No, you have at least a few years on me.  You are one of the few.

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