Gulf Today

White House war on science undermines trust in COVID-19 vaccine and America’s reputation worldwide

- Trudy Rubin,

Late in the fourth year of the Trump presidency, the United States is confrontin­g a far more dangerous war than the “forever wars” he says he is ending. This is a multiphase conflict begun by the president himself, with new batle fronts opened daily. The deadly combat can end only if he is voted out of office.

It began as Trump’s war on science, which has cost tens of thousands of US lives due to the White House failure to contain COVID-19.

It has morphed into a Vaccine War, in which Trump contradict­s his scientists with false claims that a vaccine will be generally available before the election. Yet the White House politiciza­tion of science creates such mistrust that only 4 in 10 Americans say they would take a vaccine if offered prior to November. Thus the president undermines the very cure he claims will save the country.

Moreover the price of Trump’s science wars extends beyond the relentless rise in the US death toll, now nearly 200,000. His reckless batles have undermined America’s reputation and security interests worldwide — and the cost will mount if they don’t end soon.

Trump’s batle plan was laid bare by his public slap down Wednesday of Robert R. Redfield, director of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Redfield told a Senate commitee a vaccine won’t be widely available until at least the middle of next year, with at best a “very limited supply” in November or December. Meantime, Redfield said, masks were “the most important, powerful public health tool we have.”

Yet a steady stream of derogatory critiques by the administra­tion toward its scientific advisers continues to confuse the American public.

Only recently the top communicat­ions official at the Department of Health and Human Services, Michael Caputo, posted a Facebook video accusing CDC scientists of “sedition,” claiming they included a pro-biden cabal “who do not want America to get well.” (Caputo came under such fire, he is stepping down for two months but is not resigning.)

The political tinkering with CDC directives, the presidenti­al promotion of unproven cures, the false statistics used (and later retracted) by the Food and Drug Administra­tion’s director, all point to a health bureaucrac­y under terrible pressure from Doctor Trump.

So it’s no wonder that a recent poll by the Kaiser Family Foundation showed that only 14% of Americans expect a vaccine before November, while 50% of Democrats, 41% of independen­ts, and 36% of Republican­s would refuse to take it.

“Trust is going to be an issue, and the current leadership has squandered trust,” I was told by epidemiolo­gist Philip Landrigan, director of Boston College’s Public Health Program. “You can bet the anti-vaxxers are gearing up.”

Indeed, our beleaguere­d country is now enmeshed in a Vaccine War.

Anti-vaccinatio­n activists are mobilizing online, many of them Trump supporters. (He was once an anti-vaxxer.)

Meantime, many on the let and in the centre doubt the vaccine will be safe, given Trump’s politicisa­tion of science. And many in the Black community are suspicious, given the history of the US Public Health Service’s Tuskegee experiment­s on Black men in the 1930s.

There are, of course, still US safeguards. Nine leading drug companies have pledged that they won’t submit vaccine candidates for FDA review until clinical trials ensure they are safe and effective.

And a top FDA official, Peter Marks, pledged to resign if the FDA authorises pre-election approval to any vaccine before data support its use. In such a case, pressure by the media, Congress, and scientists would be critical. But even if such pressure works, trust will take a further hit.

And the danger from Trump’s war on science extends beyond our boundaries. A recent Pew Poll shows a stunning plunge in America’s reputation among its democratic allies in Europe and Asia, in large part linked to how the United States has handled the pandemic. Across 13 countries polled, a median of just 15% say the United States had done a good job.

Trump’s war on science is indefensib­le, and will impose terrible costs at home and abroad if it continues. Only US voters can bring it to an end.

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