The Oklahoman

Gulf between Trump and doctors on mask-wearing gets wider

- By Darlene Superville and Aamer Madhani

WASHINGTON — The gulf between President Donald Trump and public health officials over wearing face masks keeps widening, undercutti­ng medical experts who say consistent face covering is one of the best tools — short of a vaccine — to fight the spread of the coronaviru­s.

Trump has gone back and forth on protective masks in the roughly six months since the virus has taken root in the U.S., muddying the message from doctors and other health experts.

White House officials insist that Trump has always supported wearing masks, but the president's own words and actions tell a very different — and sometimes puzzling — story.

He dismissed mask wearing for himself, then allowed himself to be seen wearing one while visiting a military hospital. He has called it “patriotic” to wear a mask but seems to seldom pass up an opportunit­y to mock Democratic presidenti­al candidate Joe Biden for his routine mask donning.

And on Wednesday, after the director of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention told Congress that his mask might even be a better guarantee than a vaccine against the virus, Trump publicly undercut Dr. Robert Redfield.

“As far as the mask is concerned, he made a mistake,” said Trump.

Hours earlier, White House press secretary Kayleigh McEnany had said: “The president has always supported mask wearing, and he's made many comments to that effect from this podium.”

Lawrence Gostin, a public health expert at Georgetown University's law school, said Trump's vacillatio­n between portraying masks as an infringeme­nt on personal rights and touting them as crucial to stemming the virus has left Americans “absolutely dazed and confused.”

“One could forgive the American public for not trusting anyone,” Gostin said.

But Gostin also faulted Redfield for asserting that masks are more important than an eventual vaccine, at least until one is approved. Suggesting that being vaccinated is less important as long as people are wearing masks further clouded the public message, Gostin said.

Public health experts largely agree that COVID-19, the disease the virus causes, will be brought under control through a combinatio­n of social distancing, mask wearing and a vaccine.

“One of those three is not enough, you need all three,” Gostin said. “It's such a simple message. It's just befuddling that the White House doesn't consistent­ly state that message.”

Trump has very seldom worn a mask for the world to see, though he is regularly tested for COVID-19 and says he does wear one when he can't practice social distancing. At one point, he suggested that the reason some people wear masks is to make a political statement against him.

The CDC recommende­d in April that people wear cloth face coverings in public when it's difficult to be socially distant. But Trump immediatel­y undercut the guidance, declaring he wouldn't follow it and suggesting it would be unseemly to be masked in a meeting with a head of state.

The first image of a masked Trump surfaced on social media in May after he donned one for a behind-the-scenes tour of a Ford facility in Michigan. Reporters were not allowed on the tour, and afterward Trump told them he'd worn a mask in a “back area” only because “I didn't want to give the press the pleasure of seeing it.”

In June, as he prepared to hold his first indoor political rally of the COVID-era, Trump complained to The Wall Street Journal that Americans were wearing masks as a way to signal disapprova­l of him, and not as a preventive measure. He complained that people can't help but fidget with the coverings, similar to assertions he made on national television this week.

“They put their finger on the mask, and they take them off, and then they start touching their eyes and touching their nose and their mouth,” Trump said.

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