Lodi News-Sentinel

Fauci says there is no order to slow down COVID-19 testing

- By Elliot Wailoo

WASHINGTON — Dr. Anthony Fauci and other top government officials fighting the COVID-19 pandemic said Tuesday they had not been ordered to slow down testing for the disease, despite President Donald Trump’s insistence hours earlier that he was not kidding when he said he directed them to back off.

“To my knowledge, none of us have ever been told to slow down on testing,” Fauci said in testimony before the House Energy and Commerce Committee. “That is just a fact.”

He said testing would continue, and be accelerate­d.

The three other officials testifying Tuesday — Centers for Disease Control and Prevention Director Robert Redfield, Food and Drug Administra­tion Commission­er Stephen Hahn and Health and Human Services Assistant Secretary Brett Giroir — said they had not received such a slowdown order either.

Earlier Tuesday morning, Trump reiterated that he had directed his administra­tion to slow testing, a claim he first made during a campaign rally in Tulsa, Oklahoma, on Saturday. Trump has complained that increased testing in the U.S. is inflating the number of reported cases compared with other nations.

After the rally, several administra­tion officials claimed Trump was kidding and his comments were clearly a joke.

“I don’t kid,” Trump said Tuesday when asked whether he was serious.

Fauci, a member of the White House Coronaviru­s Task Force since January, called the current virus response a “mixed bag,” with some parts of the country improving, such as the former epicenter of COVID-19, New York City.

But he added: “In other areas of the country, we now see a disturbing surge of infections,” attributin­g the rise to “an increase of community spread.”

In particular, Fauci pointed to rising case counts in Florida, Texas and Arizona — three states with governors intent on reopening.

“The next couple of weeks are going to be critical in our ability to address those surges,” he said.

Under questionin­g from Rep. Bobby L. Rush, D-Ill., Fauci acknowledg­ed that institutio­nal racism was a factor in the virus’s disproport­ionate effect on Black communitie­s.

“Obviously the African American community has suffered from racism for a very, very long period of time, and I cannot imagine that that has not contribute­d to the conditions that they find themselves in economical­ly and otherwise,” Fauci said.

He said Black Americans are more likely to have jobs that put them at higher risk for COVID-19, and more likely to suffer from chronic health conditions that make them more susceptibl­e to infection.

“Unfortunat­ely, we have a situation where it’s sort of a double whammy of a negative capability of them to respond, through no fault of their own.”

Redfield updated the committee on the CDC’s efforts to mandate reporting of race and ethnicity data for all coronaviru­s patients, which began May 8.

“Reporting from hospital surveillan­ce sites has increased in completene­ss from 30% to now more than 80%,” Redfield said in his opening statement.

Fauci, who has served under six presidents as the director of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases, has been notably absent from public briefings for weeks.

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