Daily Press

Trump case reveals US vulnerabil­ity

His virus diagnosis comes as nation at response crossroads

- By Carla K. Johnson and Jim Salter

ST. CHARLES, Mo. — President Donald Trump’s COVID-19 diagnosis serves as a reminder of the pervasive spread of the coronaviru­s and shows how tenuous of a grip the nation has on the crisis, health experts said.

With U.S. infections rising for several weeks, Trump became one of the tens of thousands of Americans who test positive each day. He went through a “very concerning” period Friday, White House chief of staff Mark Meadows said Saturday.

That differed dramatical­ly from the rosy assessment by Trump’s staff and doctors, who took pains Saturday not to reveal the president had received supplement­al oxygen at the White House before he went to a military hospital. But the doctors revealed Sunday that Trump’s blood oxygen level dropped twice in recent days. Some of Trump’s top advisers and allies also have tested positive recently.

“No one is entirely out of the virus’s reach, even those supposedly inside a protective bubble,” said Josh Michaud, associate director of global health policy with the Kaiser Family Foundation in Washington.

Eight months after the virus reached the United States, worrying signals mounted of what’s ahead this fall.

Some hospitals in Wisconsin have run low on space, and experts warned of a likely surge in infections during the colder months ahead. Some economists say it could take as long as late 2023 for the job market to fully recover.

The U.S. leads the world in numbers of confirmed infections, with more than

7.4 million, and deaths, with nearly 210,000.

“The statistics are so mindboggli­ng, they make us numb to the reality of just how painful, unacceptab­le and absurd this is,” said Dr. Reed Tuckson, board chairman of the nonpartisa­n Health Policy Alliance in Washington. “Every single American must double down on their vigilance. If we don’t, then we are being foolhardy and irresponsi­ble.”

Trump’s infection occurred as the nation has reached a crossroads in its response to the virus. The U.S. is averaging 40,000 cases a day. The situation is improving in Sun Belt states that were hot spots in the summer, and many loosened restrictio­ns this week.

Mississipp­i’s governor ended a mask requiremen­t, South Carolina’s governor said he would ease capacity restrictio­ns on restaurant­s

and New Orleans bars got the green light to sell carryout drinks. Florida has moved ahead with an aggressive reopening that gives bars and restaurant­s latitude to allow as many customers as they choose.

The outlook is gloomier in the Midwest.

Wisconsin reported a record daily death toll Wednesday, and hospitals in multiple cities said they were running out of space. A 530-bed field hospital that the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers built on the state fairground­s in the city of West Allis in April could be used if the situation worsens.

Iowa reported more than 1,000 new cases for the third consecutiv­e day Friday as the virus continued to aggressive­ly spread, but the governor said bars in the two largest college towns could reopen Monday after a fiveweek closure. South Dakota

officials reported record highs in deaths and cases Thursday.

In Missouri, several people waving Trump signs and American flags at drivers in the St. Louis suburb of St. Charles on Saturday said the president and Republican Gov. Mike Parson getting infected recently won’t change their behavior.

Of the roughly two dozen Trump supporters who gathered, most didn’t wear masks.

Vince Kuhn, a 72-year-old retiree and Vietnam War veteran, called Trump “a brave man” who likely caught the virus because he was willing to be out with people.

Kuhn said he opposed restrictio­ns like mask mandates before the president got sick and still does.

“I fought for freedom in ’Nam,” Kuhn said. “I really didn’t like it when they stopped us from going to

church and assembling. But people are coming back. Everything’s coming back. People want the real America we fought for.”

Carol Schutz, 54, who had a lung transplant last year and often wears a mask but didn’t Saturday, doesn’t believe Trump’s illness will sway many people but will be “more fuel for the fire” for those who don’t like him.

The mood was far different in St. Louis.

Arlene Mathis, 65, was one of several Black volunteers at voter registrati­on event where nearly everyone wore masks.

“I don’t know that we would have to have the president affected by this to be awakened by it, because so many people have died and continue to die every day,” Mathis said.

She was hopeful, however, that Trump’s illness would change behavior.

“It’s an indication that nobody is immune,” Mathis said. “It goes high, it goes low, it goes everywhere.”

Dr. William Schaffner, an infectious diseases expert at Vanderbilt University, said Trump’s diagnosis “reinforces the notion we need a national policy, and we need everyone to participat­e in the basic prevention­s.“

Instead, Schaffner said, the response “has been subcontrac­ted to the governors, which has left us with a crazy quilt of approaches.”

For months, Trump has downplayed the virus, rarely wearing a mask, holding large campaign rallies and urging businesses and schools to reopen. Masks have not been mandatory for White House staff, despite evidence they help stop the spread.

“Now, tragically, this experiment has shown, at the highest office of the country, it ain’t working. It didn’t work,” Schaffner said.

 ?? JAE C. HONG/AP ?? A man wearing a face mask walks past a mural Wednesday in Los Angeles. The U.S. is averaging 40,000 virus cases a day.
JAE C. HONG/AP A man wearing a face mask walks past a mural Wednesday in Los Angeles. The U.S. is averaging 40,000 virus cases a day.

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