The Columbus Dispatch

Trump, health advisers go separate ways on virus

Messages painting different views of reality

- Ricardo Alonso-zaldivar

WASHINGTON – A multistate coronaviru­s surge in the countdown to Election Day has exposed a clear split between President Donald Trump’s embrace of a return to normalcy and urgent public warnings from the government’s top health officials.

It’s the opposite of what usually happens in a public health crisis because political leaders tend to repeat and amplify the recommenda­tions of their health experts.

“It’s extremely unusual for there to be simultaneo­us contrary messaging,” said John Auerbach, who heads the nonpartisa­n Trust for America’s Health.

The Republican president and the health officials appear to be moving farther apart since White House chief of staff Mark Meadows declared last Sunday “we’re not going to control the pandemic.”

Since then, Health and Human Services Assistant Secretary Adm. Brett Giroir has done a round of interviews warning that the country’s situation is “tenuous” but that Americans can indeed control the virus by practicing what he calls the “3W’s” – watching your distance from others, wearing a mask and washing your hands.

White House coronaviru­s adviser Dr. Deborah Birx, touring the states to raise prevention awareness, lamented in Bismarck, North Dakota, that she hadn’t seen such disdain for mask wearing elsewhere.

“We find that deeply unfortunat­e because you don’t know who’s infected and you don’t know if you’re infected yourself,” she told reporters.

The state’s positive test rate is 11%, above the level indicating widespread transmissi­on.

HHS Secretary Alex Azar, for his part, has a profile photo of himself wearing a mask on his Twitter account.

But Trump continues to ridicule masks and mask-wearing .

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