Daily Press (Sunday)

Trump’s response to virus filled with unmet promises

- By Calvin Woodward

WASHINGTON — For several months, President Donald Trump and his officials have cast a fog of promises meant to reassure a country in the throes of the coronaviru­s pandemic. Trump and his team haven’t delivered on critical ones.

They talk numbers. Bewilderin­g numbers about masks on the way. About tests being taken. About ships sailing to the rescue, breathing machines being built, aircraft laden with supplies from abroad, dollars flowing to crippled businesses.

Piercing that fog is the reality that Americans are going without the medical supplies and much of the financial help they most need from the government — and were told they’d have it.

The U.S. is at or near the height of COVID-19 sickness and death, experts believe.

There’s no question that on major fronts, the federal government is pushing hard now to get up to speed. But in large measure the supplies will arrive on the downslope of the pandemic, putting the U.S. in a better position should the same virus strike again while landing too late for this outbreak’s lethal curve.

Concerning ventilator­s, for example, Trump recently allowed: “A lot of them will be coming at a time when we won’t need them as badly.”

The U.S. testing system, key to containing infection, has been a failure in the crunch, as public health authoritie­s — but never Trump — acknowledg­ed in March.

A newly deployed rapid test could help change that. But it’s not ready for actual use in great numbers. New Hampshire, for one, received 15 rapid-test machines but only enough cartridges to run two. “I’m banging my head against the wall,” Republican Gov. Chris Sununu said last week.

False starts and dead ends are inevitable in any crisis, especially one driven by a new virus. But bold promises have flowed day after day from a president who minimized the danger for months and exaggerate­s what Washington is doing about it.

Masks, gloves, gowns:

Doctors, nurses, flight attendants and other frontline workers have had to go begging for hospital staples: masks, gloves, other protective garb.

The mere scale of the pandemic stretched supplies even in better prepared countries. Yet the enduring shortages in the U.S. are not just from a lack of foresight, but also from hesitancy as the pandemic started to sicken and kill Americans.

It was not until midMarch, when some hospitals were already treating thousands of infected patients without enough equipment, that the government placed bulk orders for N95 masks and other necessitie­s for its stockpile. Washington dithered on supplies for two months after global alarm bells rang about a pandemic in January.

And the Strategic National Stockpile maxed out last week, before the pandemic’s U.S. peak.

Tests: “Anybody that needs a test, gets a test,” Trump said March 6.

Not true.

The greatly expanding but still vastly insufficie­nt capacity to test people is steered mostly to those who are already sick or to essential workers at the most risk of exposure.

Within three weeks of China’s New Year’s Eve notificati­on of mysterious pneumonia cases, China had sequenced the genetic makeup of the virus, German scientists had developed a test for detecting it and the World Health Organizati­on had adopted the test and moved toward global distributi­on.

The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention bypassed the WHO test and sponsored its own, which was flawed out of the gate. Trump said the WHO test was flawed, but it wasn’t.

Precious time was lost.

Germany, in contrast, raced ahead with aggressive testing of a broad segment of the population when it had fewer than 10 cases in January. It has experience­d far fewer deaths proportion­ally than the United States.

“There were many, many opportunit­ies not to end up where we are,” said Dr. AshishJha, director of the Harvard Global Health Institute.

Ventilator­s: Trump invoked the Defense Production Act, empowering him to order companies to make what the country needs. This raised expectatio­ns that a new wave of emergency supplies generally and ventilator­s in particular could come to the aid of patients and the people looking after them.

Under the president’s “vigorous, swift” order to General Motors, said Peter Navarro, White House point man on the emergency supply chain, new ventilator­s would be ready in “Trump time, which is to say as fast as possible.”

Yet Trump has held off on using his full powers. A directive to GM on ventilator manufactur­ing essentiall­y told the company to do what it was already doing.

The ventilator shortfall has been the most frightenin­g deficiency as more people get infected and die by the hour. In the current chaos, the size of the shortfall nationally is not known.

 ?? ANDREW HARNIK/AP ?? President Donald Trump and his team have failed to deliver on promises in the pandemic.
ANDREW HARNIK/AP President Donald Trump and his team have failed to deliver on promises in the pandemic.

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