Lodi News-Sentinel

Ousted expert says Trump has no plan, poor timetable for vaccine

- By David S. Cloud

WASHINGTON — The Trump administra­tion’s timetable for developing a coronaviru­s treatment is likely too optimistic and it has no plan in place for mass production and distributi­on of such a vaccine, a federal whistleblo­wer told Congress Thursday.

Rick Bright, a senior vaccine expert at the Department of Health and Human Services until his ouster last month, said plans to develop a vaccine by early next year required “everything to go perfectly” and “we’ve never seen everything go perfectly.”

The administra­tion has dubbed its effort to prepare a vaccine “Operation Warp Speed,” and President Donald Trump claimed Thursday in an interview on Fox Business that a vaccine could be available by the end of the year.

Even if a treatment is developed, the federal government still lacks a plan to produce tens of millions of doses of a vaccine, Bright told the House Energy and Commerce Committee.

“We need to have a strategy and plan in place now to make sure that we cannot only fill that vaccine, make it, distribute it, but administer it in a fair and equitable plan,” he said. “We do not have that yet, and it is a significan­t concern.”

Democrats on the panel praised Bright for pushing the administra­tion to ramp up its response in the first months of the outbreak while Republican­s sought to poke holes in his claims that senior officials had ignored his warnings.

Bright was abruptly removed in April as head of the Biomedical Advanced Research and Developmen­t Authority, a research agency within the Health and Human Services Department that, among other duties, was overseeing research on coronaviru­s vaccines.

He filed a whistleblo­wer complaint last week alleging he was reassigned to a lesser job in retaliatio­n after warning repeatedly in January and February about the need for masks and other protective equipment to prepare for a coronaviru­s outbreak.

He said senior officials also pressured him to back widespread use of antimalari­a drugs touted by Trump as a treatment for the virus, even after Bright warned about possible health dangers of allowing the drug to be used without doctor supervisio­n.

Trump on Thursday dismissed Bright as a discontent­ed employee. “I don’t know the so-called Whistleblo­wer Rick Bright, never met him or even heard of him, but to me he is a disgruntle­d employee, not liked or respected by people I spoke to and who, with his attitude, should no longer be working for our government!” the president tweeted.

The Health and Human Services Department sought to rebut Bright’s claims, saying that “his whistleblo­wer complaint is filled with one-sided arguments and misinforma­tion.”

Democrats on the committee defended Bright as an experience­d expert who was ignored by superiors who sought to please Trump by playing down the severity of the virus.

“In you, we have somebody who made the right call in the early days and has been removed from your position while so many people who made the wrong call still have their jobs,” said Rep. John Sarbanes, D-Md.

Bright said one of his lowest moments came when his attempt to ramp up production of respirator masks went nowhere.

He recalled receiving emails in January from Mike Bowen, executive vice president of a medical supply company called Prestige Ameritech, who warned that U.S. supplies of N95 respirator masks were “completely decimated.”

“I pushed that forward to the highest levels I could in HHS and got no response,” Bright said. “From that moment I knew that we were going to have a crisis for our health care workers because we were not taking action. We were already behind the ball.”

Republican­s avoided criticizin­g Bright directly, noting that some of his suggestion­s were adopted after Bright contacted White House aide Peter Navarro, who shared his ideas for combating the virus with other officials around Trump.

Navarro and other administra­tion officials declined to appear at the Thursday hearing.

 ?? BRIAN CAHN/ZUMA WIRE ?? A screen grab of Dr. Rick Bright on MSNBC’s “The Beat” on May 5.
BRIAN CAHN/ZUMA WIRE A screen grab of Dr. Rick Bright on MSNBC’s “The Beat” on May 5.
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