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Lessons Learned

Great read about Bhutan's pandemic strategy. Resilience and focusing on the collective good are pointed out as reasons why that country has such remarkable success. The final takeaway was my favorite:

Finally, make it possible for people to actually follow public-health guidance by providing economic and social support to those who need to quarantine or isolate. Nuzzo calls these “wraparound services.” But Tenzing Lamsang, an investigative journalist and editor of The Bhutanese, believes the term doesn’t do justice to Bhutan’s deeper policy impulses. “Bhutan’s approach as a Buddhist country, a country that values Gross National Happiness, is different from a typical technocratic approach,” he told me, noting that its pandemic plan covered “all aspects of well-being.”

All aspects of well-being for a person, automatically broadens the scope of care. It takes a village to make any one person to experience a feeling of all around well-being. Maybe that message was lost in the shuffle here in America where the desire for individual freedom and choice left people bereft of that village. 

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