Coronavirus Has Come to the U.S. and Lawsuits Won’t Be Far Behind
Suing over Covid-19 is the American way.
Coronavirus fears sweep across America.
Photographer: Brian Blanco/Getty ImagesThe coronavirus called Covid-19 has spread beyond its origin in Wuhan, China, and has arrived on U.S. shores. I’m a law professor, not an epidemiologist, so my thoughts immediately turned to how the law would shape America’s collective response to a broader pandemic — and what the government’s power will mean for individual rights under the Constitution.
It’s a question that could soon become an urgent one — I recently interviewed Marc Lipsitch, the brilliant epidemiologist who runs the Center for Communicable Disease Dynamics at Harvard’s T.H. Chan School of Public Health, for my podcast. Lipsitch told me, very calmly, that based on past pandemics and current information, 40-70% of adults in the world are likely to catch the virus in the absence of strong countermeasures. Between one and two percent of those could die.
