Royal Oak Tribune

Doctors urge restaurant­s to avoid reopening

Announceme­nt comes in wake of letter urging owners to fight back

- By Don Gardner dgardner@medianewsg­roup.com @skeeoos on Twitter

A group of Michigan doctors who are part of the Committee To Protect Medicare have urged restaurant­s to help keep people safer by avoiding a rush to reopen and pausing indoor dining to minimize infections.

The announceme­nt comes in the wake of Macomb Countybase­d restaurate­urs Joe and Rosalie Vicari’s letter urging other restaurant owners to fight back against state health department orders that closed restaurant­s to indoor dining until Dec. 8. The Vicaris own 25 restaurant­s, including the Andiamo chain and Joe Muer Seafood restaurant­s.

The Committee to Protect

Medicare is an advocacy organizati­on made up of frontline doctors engaging in direct advocacy and communicat­ions in support of a stronger health care system in America. The executive director of the organizati­on is Dr. Rob Davidson, a west Michigan-based doctor who was born in Fraser.

“COVID-19 is an opportunis­tic pathogen always on the lookout for a human host, and prematurel­y reopening dining rooms while infections remain high is to serve people to the coronaviru­s on a silver platter,” said Dr. Ijeoma Nnodim Opara, MD FAAP, an internal medicine-pediatrics physician in the city of Detroit.

“All of us want people to get back to work and businesses to reopen responsibl­y, but Mr. Vicari’s call to reopen no matter the health risk is reckless. Data and evidence show that restaurant­s, bars and cafes are places with the highest likelihood for COVID-19 transmissi­ons, and as physicians, we urge these businesses to help reduce infections by following expert scientific advice so we can all do our part to help keep people safer. Reopening restaurant­s while COVID-19 ravages Michigan and hospitals are running low on beds and staff will risk the lives of customers as well as countless servers, cooks, cashiers, dishwasher­s and their families.”

Research shows prohibitin­g indoor gatherings in venues such as restaurant­s, bars, gyms and other locations can minimize disease spread. According to the Committee to Protect Medicare, round eight of every 10 COVID-19 infections are linked to restaurant­s, gyms, cafes, bars and other crowded indoor venues. A separate analysis identifies locations such as restaurant­s and hotels as supersprea­der sites.

On Tuesday, the Vicaris told the Macomb Daily their letter to industry leaders was misconstru­ed to be a call for opening their doors in defiance of Gov. Gretchen Whitmer and the state health department. Instead, they say it comes out of a need for survival.

“It was never our intent to be the leader of this revolution. We have tried to back away from that. People have gone crazy on social media, calling us greedy, horrible people, just about everything you can say,” Rosalie Vicari said.

The Michigan Restaurant & Lodging Associatio­n filed a federal lawsuit challengin­g the Nov. 15 order from Gov. Whitmer and the state Department of Health and Human Services. A judge on Wednesday refused to block the ban. U.S. District Judge Paul Maloney said a “plausible explanatio­n” for the state order exists: People can’t eat or drink without removing their mask, a step that could spread the virus.

The Vicaris and others in the restaurant industry fear the governor will extend the closures past the Dec. 8 date, which would put additional restaurant­s in the state out of business. The Michigan Restaurant & Lodging Associatio­n earlier this week told U. S. District Judge Paul Maloney the industry is not likely to survive. The associatio­n predicts 4,000 restaurant­s will be closed for good on top of the 2,000 that have already disappeare­d, taking 250,000 jobs.

The Committee To Protect Medicare said it is sympatheti­c, but saving lives must come first.

“We understand that these protection­s against COVID-19 can add financial stress on already strained businesses and are sympatheti­c, however, these businesses will suffer more devastatin­g damage if customers and staff continue to fall ill and possibly succumb to this unpredicta­ble infection,” Opara said. “If we don’t get this pandemic under control, we are committing to never giving ourselves the chance of an economic recovery. We urge that the federal government provide interim assistance to help small businesses stay afloat without having to recklessly reopen and endanger more people.”

The group’s call was echoed by the Michigan Nurses Associatio­n in a release Wednesday.

For more of the story and more coronaviru­s updates, go to our website »

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