Oldsouljer said:Yes, among other things, it begs the question, why do we have states anyway? Of course, in the last one hundred years, states seems to have evolved into departments" of the federal government.packgrad said:
I think it's ridiculous to expect the federal government to orchestrate the vaccinations. There is no one size fits all approach for the 50 states. It may be asking too much to expect it of the governors, but i think that's a much more reasonable expectation.
No, it doesn't.
The federal government is ideally and uniquely situated to apply massive resources to expensive and complex problems on scale. They are not well suited for highly tailored and local solutions. This was always going to be a blended fed, state, and local solution but it could have been so much better than the feds basically being a vaccine Instacart and just dropping the vaccine off on the front porch of every state.
We suspected months ago that we would begin sticking needles in arms Q4.
There's no reason why the CDC/FDA could not have begun this summer developing a modular game plan for urban, suburban, exurban, and rural distribution that was implantable in every state, with some minor geographical modifications as necessary.
Identify transmission pipelines and downstream distribution networks working outward from all the major airline hubs in every state.
Engage with state and local governments, institutional hospital and health care providers, and industry (FedEx/UPS/DHL and CVS/Walgreens) to drill down from vaccine delivery to each state all the way to end users receiving their second dose.
The feds needed to provide the detailed roadmap, rely on the states and local governments and industry to extend their reach, and make sure the boots on the ground had the resources and full assistance of the federal government to do so.
Instead we've distributed only 20% of the vaccines we were supposed to by this point.
I'm a civil engineer that took a couple of systems classes 20 years ago. I'm a complete amateur thinking about this while unwinding on the couch having a bourbon. In 10 minutes I could rough out a starting point, preliminary goals, and potential next steps.
What could teams of the brightest industrial and systems engineers in the country in industry and at the CDC/FDA have come up with, with several months to prepare and the full weight and resources of the federal government behind them?
Vaccine distribution isn't working because there was no plan for it to work. This is a classic but massive example of "failing to prepare is preparing to fail."