Maybe, maybe, the government wouldn't have been able to cancel outbound flights. Certainly the United States and the UK could not do so, and indeed were never as willing as China to endanger domestic commerce. But it does appear that China made a policy choice here.
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Replying to @jackfruitstaken
It would be a little problematic for it to cancel international flights, because there was so much travel going on that there were many many foreigners in China that needed to leave and many Chinese abroad who needed to come back. It would have been great if it had though.
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Replying to @as_a_as_a @jackfruitstaken
That being said so much of the non-Chinese media and establishments were so blasé about COVID until they saw what happened in Iran, and especially Italy. So it's likely that a total flight ban including international flights to and from the PRC would only slightly delay things
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Replying to @as_a_as_a @jackfruitstaken
maybe give certain countries more time to prepare, which might have helped, but it's likely that they'd still have acted not so differently, and not taken it seriously until they saw an example outside of China. The feeling was that China, because it is authoritarian, must be
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Replying to @as_a_as_a @jackfruitstaken
...overreacting, while, Iran, a poor, beleaguered, pariah state was simply not up to the task of addressing the public health issue. Italy was pivotal.
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Replying to @sealsniper_urt @jackfruitstaken
China messed up internally at the beginning no doubt. There was mismanagement, conflict between local and federal authorities until they got it all sorted. But after that they did pretty decently and followed the WHO regs to alert others. So I don't blame them much, but
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by then the cat was out of the bag and it was too late to stop the global spread. For me it is less a matter of blame than a feature of the PRC's political system. Local authorities in Wuhan had an incentive to hide bad news from Beijing. Local drs etc were not able to report
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Replying to @sealsniper_urt @jackfruitstaken
In the US under ideal circumstances it wouldn't be up to Texas. The hospital etc. would report directly to the CDC which would take action. Of course this is only relevant at the beginning of the outbreak when it is containable. While the past years has been a refutation of our
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Hospitals do have a mandate to report to the CDC. The big question is always the lowest level because that's where the most buck passing is likely to happen in the critical moment, which is really hospital admin. The CDC can also freeze though, as it kinda did this time.
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Replying to @sealsniper_urt @jackfruitstaken
In China the local authorities jailed that Dr who reported the issue and treated him quite badly. That could not happen in the US. At worst he would be suspended, and even that would be subject to appeals etc
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