San Diego Union-Tribune

OFFICIALS LASH TRUMP ADMINISTRA­TION RESPONSE TO CORONAVIRU­S PANDEMIC

Birx: Quick action could have greatly reduced death toll

- BY SHERYL GAY STOLBERG Stolberg writes for The New York Times. The Washington Post contribute­d to this report.

In interviews broadcast on CNN Sunday night, former President Donald Trump’s pandemic officials confirmed in stark and no uncertain terms what was already an open secret in Washington: The administra­tion’s pandemic response was riddled with dysfunctio­n, and the discord, untruths and infighting most likely cost many lives.

Dr. Deborah Birx, Trump’s coronaviru­s response coordinato­r, suggested that hundreds of thousands of Americans may have died needlessly, and Adm. Brett Giroir, the testing czar, said the administra­tion lied to the public about the availabili­ty of testing.

The comments were among a string of bombshells that emerged during a CNN special report that featured the doctors who led the government’s coronaviru­s response in 2020.

Dr. Robert R. Redfield, the former director of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, accused Trump’s health secretary, Alex Azar, and the secretary’s leadership team of pressuring him to revise scientific reports. “Now he may deny that, but it’s true,” Redfield said in an interview with Dr. Sanjay Gupta, CNN’s chief medical correspond­ent. Azar, in a statement, denied it.

Dr. Stephen Hahn, the former commission­er of the Food and Drug Administra­tion, said his relationsh­ip with Azar had grown “strained” after the health secretary revoked the agency’s power to regulate coronaviru­s tests. “That was a line in the sand for me,” Hahn said. When Gupta asked him if Azar had screamed at him, Hahn replied: “You should ask him that question.”

But it was Birx, who has been pilloried for praising Trump as being “so attentive to the scientific literature” and for not publicly correcting the president as he made outlandish claims about unproven therapies, whose disclosure­s may have been the most compelling.

As of Sunday, more than 548,000 Americans have died from infection with the coronaviru­s.

“I look at it this way,” she said. “The first time, we have an excuse. There were about 100,000 deaths that came from that original surge.

“All of the rest of them,” she added, referring to almost 450,000 deaths, “in my mind, could have been mitigated or decreased substantia­lly” had the administra­tion acted more aggressive­ly.

In what was in one of her first televised interviews since leaving the White House in January, she also described a “very uncomforta­ble, very direct and very difficult” phone call with Trump after she spoke out about the dangers of the virus last summer. “Everybody in the White House was upset with that interview,” she said.

After that, she decided to travel the country to talk to state and local leaders about masks and social distancing and other public health measures that the president didn’t want her to explain to the American public from the White House podium.

Gupta asked if she was being censored. “Clearly someone was blocking me from doing it,” she said. “My understand­ing was I could not be national because the president might see it.”

Several of the officials, including Dr. Anthony Fauci — who unlike the others is a career scientist and is now advising President Joe Biden — blamed China, where the virus was first detected, for not being open enough with the United States. And several, including Redfield and Giroir, said early stumbles with testing — and the attitude within the White House that testing made the president look bad by driving up the number of case reports — were a serious problem in the administra­tion’s response.

And the problems with testing went beyond simply Trump’s obsession with optics. Giroir said that the administra­tion simply did not have as many tests as top officials claimed at the time.

“When we said there were millions of tests — there weren’t, right?” he said. “There were components of the test available but not the full deal.”

Trump on Monday rebuked Birx and Fauci, the government’s top infectious-disease expert, saying they were “two self-promoters trying to reinvent history to cover for their bad instincts and faulty recommenda­tions, which I fortunatel­y almost always overturned.”

“Dr. Fauci and Dr. Birx moved far too slowly, and if it were up to them we’d currently be locked in our basements as our country suffered through a financial depression,” Trump said in a lengthy statement that also mocked Fauci’s wild ceremonial pitch at a baseball game last year and insulted Birx’s hearing.

 ?? EVAN VUCCI AP ?? Dr. Deborah Birx described a “very uncomforta­ble” call with former President Donald Trump after she spoke out about the dangers of the virus.
EVAN VUCCI AP Dr. Deborah Birx described a “very uncomforta­ble” call with former President Donald Trump after she spoke out about the dangers of the virus.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States