The Day

Upcoming Trump rally called ‘dangerous move’

- By CARLA K. JOHNSON and JILL COLVIN

Washington — After months away from the campaign trail, President Donald Trump plans to rally his supporters next Saturday for the first time since most of the country was shuttered by the coronaviru­s. But health experts are questionin­g that decision.

Trump will head to Tulsa, Okla. — a state that has seen relatively few COVID-19 cases. Yet the Tulsa City-County Health Department’s director told the Tulsa World over the weekend that he wished the Trump campaign would move the date back because of a “significan­t increase in our case trends.”

“I’m concerned about our ability to protect anyone who attends a large, indoor event, and I’m also concerned about our ability to ensure the president stays safe as well,” Dr. Bruce Dart told the newspaper.

Other health experts also cite the danger of infection spreading among the crowd and sparking outbreaks when people return to their homes. The Trump campaign itself acknowledg­es the risk in a waiver attendees must agree to absolving them of any responsibi­lity should people get sick.

Trump’s rally will be held indoors, at a 19,000-seat arena that has canceled all other events through the end of July. Scientists believe the virus spreads far more easily in crowded enclosed spaces than it does outdoors, where circulatin­g air has a better chance of dispersing virus particles.

The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention outlines the highest risk events for transmissi­on of the coronaviru­s this way: “Large in-person gatherings where it is difficult for individual­s to remain spaced at least 6 feet apart and attendees travel from outside the local area.” The CDC recommends cloth masks in places where people might shout or chant.

Trump’s rallies typically draw tens of thousands of supporters. They usually stand outside in line for hours before passing through airport-style security and cramming into an arena, where they sit side by side or stand shoulder to shoulder. The rallies are typically raucous, with much shouting, cheering and chanting. Some people dance and jeer at reporters. Sometimes protesters are met with violence before they are removed by security.

Many attendees are older, which would put them at higher risk of severe complicati­ons from COVID-19. It’s not unusual for several individual­s in the crowd to require medical attention when the temperatur­e rises.

The rallies also typically draw supporters from surroundin­g towns and states. Some die-hard fans travel across the country from rally to rally like groupies for a band.

Dr. Ashish Jha, director of Harvard’s Global Health Institute, called the upcoming Trump rally “an extraordin­arily dangerous move for the people participat­ing and the people who may know them and love them and see them afterward.”

Trump supporters coming from neighborin­g cities and states could carry the virus back home, Jha said.

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