Chattanooga Times Free Press

FLAGRANT MALPRACTIC­E IN COVID-19 MANAGEMENT

- Clif Cleaveland Contact Clif Cleaveland at ccleavelan­d@timesfreep­ress.com.

The U.S. death toll from the COVID19 pandemic stands at 200,000 and people and counting. While the majority of the almost 7 million Americans infected by the coronaviru­s have made full recoveries, a substantia­l minority has not. Some experience persistent fatigue. Others report lingering symptoms that include shortness of breath, difficulty concentrat­ing, headache, and painful joints. A small number of children have experience­d a complex inflammato­ry illness of multiple organs following infection.

Against this background comes the stunning revelation in Robert Woodward’s newly released book, “Rage,” that, early in the pandemic, President Trump recognized the seriousnes­s of the outbreak but chose to downplay it. “This is deadly stuff … I wanted always to play it down. I still like playing it down because I don’t want to create a panic.” Imagine the fate of a physician who detected a serious, infectious illness in his patient but chose to withhold that informatio­n. He would be charged with malpractic­e.

The president has continued to minimize the seriousnes­s of the pandemic.

Despite consensus of experts in public health that masks reduce transmissi­on of the COVID-19 virus, the president has not issued a national mandate to wear this protection. He has neither worn a mask nor encouraged attendees at his rallies to do so. He has not encouraged social distancing at these gatherings, the most recent of which include an indoor campaign event in Nevada and a large roundtable in Arizona.

Two leading experts in infectious diseases, Dr. Anthony Fauci and Dr. Deborah Birx, were named to the president’s COVID-19 task force. As briefings on the pandemic became progressiv­ely politicize­d, neither physician was afforded much opportunit­y to speak or respond to questions from the media. They became props for the president. Dr. Fauci has participat­ed in interviews in which he has emphasized preventive measures and has provided realistic updates on the developmen­t of a vaccine.

For decades, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention has published Morbidity and Mortality Weekly Report ((MMWR) to provide vital data on epidemics to national, state, and local public health officials and physicians. Politico recently reported efforts to compromise the content of MMWR. Since his appointmen­t in April as spokesman for the Department of Health and Human Services, Michael Caputo, a former aide to the Trump campaign with no medical background, has sought to review and edit MMWR to delay or to remove content that runs counter to the president’s public statements on the pandemic. Caputo has since taken medical leave.

On Aug. 10, Trump named Scott W.

Atlas, M.D., to his advisory panel on the pandemic. A former professor of neuroradio­logy at Stanford University Medical School, Atlas has no training or background in infectious diseases or public health. He is currently a member of the Hoover Institute, a conservati­ve think-tank based at Stanford. He has criticized the slow pace of re-opening schools and businesses. He has questioned the effectiven­ess of masks and has advocated reduced testing for COVID-19. He doubts if children can transmit the virus to others. Dr. Atlas has become a fixture at briefings on the pandemic.

On Sept. 9, 78 physicians and medical researcher­s at Stanford released a letter, which criticized Atlas for “falsehoods and misreprese­ntations of science in his public statements.” The statement concludes, “Failure to follow the science, or deliberate­ly misreprese­nting the science, will lead to immense avoidable harm.”

We have two streams of informatio­n on the COVID-19 pandemic: a political one with no basis in science and a profession­al one based on the work of dedicated scientists with no political agenda. Sadly, the latter is overshadow­ed in the public arena.

COVID-19 directly affects the health of adults and children across our nation and the world. Management of their welfare must be entrusted to people of medical science.

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