DrummerboyWolf said:
Steve Williams said:
I keep hearing about the Joe Biden Covid plan. What is it exactly and how does it differ from anything that's been done so far?
It doesn't. Everything I have heard him say, Trump has already done 6-7 months ago. He won't answer question about packing the court because "the voters don't deserve to know." Biden said that the Republicans confirming Amy Coney Barrett is "unconstitutional" just yesterday. It's not unconstitutional in any way. He wants to go back to Obamacare and try it again after it failed spectacularly. He has no policies that make any sense.
You may say you don't like Biden's plan, or don't believe he can implement it.
But to say these are all things "Trump has already done 6-7 months ago" is obviously false. You either haven't actually taken the time to look at Biden's plan, or you just want to gloss over Trump's complete failure to conceive, communicate, and implement a coherent Covid strategy for America.
1. Stop the political theater and willful misinformation that has heightened confusion and discrimination.
2. Ensure that public health decisions are made by public health professionals and not politicians.
3. Immediately restore the White House National Security Council Directorate for Global Health Security and Biodefense.
4. Make Testing Widely Available and Free.
5. Ensure that every person who needs a test can get one and that testing for those who need it is free.
6. Establish at least ten mobile testing sites and drive-through facilities per state to speed testing and protect health care workers.
7. Provide a daily public White House report on how many tests have been done by the CDC, state and local health authorities, and private laboratories.
8. Expand CDC sentinel surveillance programs and other surveillance programs so that we can offer tests not only only to those who ask but also to those who may not know to ask, especially vulnerable populations like nursing home patients and people with underlying medical conditions. This must be done in collaboration with private sector health care entities.
9. Task the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services to help establish a diagnosis code for COVID-19 on an emergency basis so that surveillance can be done using claims data.
10. Preparing to stand up multi-hundred-bed temporary hospitals in any city on short notice by deploying existing Federal Medical Stations in the strategic national stockpile and preemptively defining potential locations for their use as needed.
11. Directing the U.S. Department of Defense (DOD) to prepare for potential deployment of military resources, both the active and reserve components, and work with governors to prepare for potential deployment of National Guard resources, to provide medical facility capacity, logistical support, and additional medical personnel if necessary.
12. Instructing the CDC to establish real-time dashboards tracking (1) hospital admissions related to COVID-19, especially for ICUs and emergency departments, in concert with the American Hospital Association and large hospital chains, for which the HHS must ensure data is able to be shared, as needed; and (2) supply chain information including availability, allocation, and shipping for essential equipment and personal protective equipment, including in the various places where there may be federal reserves.
13. Ensuring that training, materials, and resources reach federally qualified health centers, rural health clinics, and safety-net hospitals, which are typically resource-poor and care disproportionately for vulnerable populations that will bear the brunt of COVID-19.
14. Surge tele-emergency room, tele-ICU care, and telemedicine through a concerted, coordinated effort by health care providers to enable staff to manage additional patients and save beds for the very sick. Leverage existing efforts like
Project ECHO to ensure health professionals have tele-mentoring and other training resources they need to make informed decisions.
15. Support older adults, vulnerable individuals, and people with disabilities. Ensure essential home- and community-based services continue and Centers for Medicare and Medicaid works to provide the waivers necessary for those who rely on medication to have a sufficient supply.
...
And on, and on...
https://joebiden.com/covid-plan/Is Trump's plan out there somewhere? Serious question. I'd like to compare the two, if so.