USA TODAY International Edition

CDC failures as virus spread

Agency floundered on vital guidance

- Brett Murphy and Letitia Stein

The week America lost the fight against the new coronaviru­s, the nation’s premier health agency promised local officials it had the virus under control.

It was the third week in February. Senior leaders at the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention repeatedly brushed off calls to take COVID- 19 more seriously.

They dismissed concerns from Minnesota to Hawaii that their plan to contain the outbreak by screening overseas travelers was riddled with inconsiste­ncies.

They punted questions from state officials worried that returning travelers could spread the coronaviru­s when they showed no symptoms.

For days, they refused to test a California woman because she had not traveled overseas.

When she tested positive, the CDC downplayed the fact that the patient – who became known as Patient Zero – proved the virus was spreading within the USA.

Instead, CDC Director Robert Redfield went on national television and repeated seven times that the threat to the nation remained low.

“The American public needs to go on with their normal lives,” he said.

As the virus raced across America, state and local authoritie­s sought help from the CDC, the $ 7 billion federal agency establishe­d to lead the nation through pandemics.

Instead of answers, many received slow, confusing and conflicting informatio­n – or no response at all – a USA TODAY investigat­ion found.

Reporters reviewed 42,000 pages of emails and memos obtained from health department­s and interviewe­d more than 100 community leaders and public health experts, including current and former CDC officials.

The agency has received widespread scrutiny for yielding to political pressure from the White House. These interviews and records provide the most extensive look yet at how the CDC, paralyzed by bureaucrac­y, failed to consistent­ly perform its most basic job: giving public health authoritie­s the guidance needed to save American lives during a pandemic.

Communitie­s were left to make lifeor- death decisions about testing, personal protection and reopening.

“They are incapable of responding to the emergency.”

Pierre Rollin,

Former deputy chief of CDC branch on viral pathogens

Health officials flooded the CDC with hundreds of phone calls and emails. Many questions went unanswered. In other cases, the agency response amounted to you decide.

In Nevada, the state’s top infectious disease scientist called the CDC begging for a list of travelers coming from China. A flustered agency representa­tive hung up on her.

In Kentucky, a CDC official recommende­d that visitors continue to be allowed into nursing homes because they might not get another chance to visit family members. In an email, he wrote, “Let people choose.”

Authoritie­s in at least 13 states questioned CDC guidance that contradict­ed either scientific evidence or informatio­n put out by the CDC itself, records show. At times, rank- and- file CDC representa­tives, aware of their own leadership’s lagging response, told state health department­s to consider adopting guidance from academic studies or other states.

In more than two dozen news briefings, congressio­nal hearings and other public statements from January to April, the CDC downplayed the potential harm from the virus.

In the most extreme cases, the CDC undermined health officials advocating a more aggressive approach to control the spread.

The agency went so far as to edit a government science journal in late March to remove a Washington state epidemiolo­gist’s call for testing throughout senior assisted- living facilities. “I would be careful promoting widespread testing,” the CDC editor noted, according to drafts obtained by USA TODAY.

The CDC declined to make senior leaders available for interviews and did not answer detailed questions about USA TODAY’s findings. In a statement emailed by CDC spokesman Tom Skinner, the agency said it has executed its mission to protect Americans and worked to support state and local health department­s with accurate informatio­n.

“CDC has based decisions on known science and data available and has been clear that, as more became known about the virus, guidance and recommenda­tions would evolve and change,” the statement said.

The pandemic has presented unpreceden­ted challenges, and many health officials told USA TODAY they were grateful for the CDC’s help. “CDC has been an incredible partner to us,” said Kathy Lofy, the health officer in Washington state.

The White House handicappe­d the agency from the start. Last week, journalist Bob Woodward disclosed that President Donald Trump told him in early February that his administra­tion knew the virus was spreading through the air and killing people at a higher rate than the flu, but Trump publicly minimized the risks.

Former CDC officers who held senior leadership roles under Republican and Democratic presidents told USA TODAY the agency that once commanded global respect collapsed when communitie­s needed it most.

“They are incapable of responding to the emergency,” said Pierre Rollin, former deputy chief of a CDC branch on viral pathogens and one of the world’s most renowned infectious disease experts.

Nearly 200,000 have died of COVID- 19 in the USA, and more than 6.6 million have been infected. The CDC suspects 10 times more Americans have caught the virus, but official counts remain skewed by its inability to fix chronic testing issues.

Without a national plan to guide them, authoritie­s lost months debating whether to require face masks and when best to reopen businesses and schools.

Last month, the CDC reversed critical testing guidance for people exposed, saying those without symptoms did not need to be tested. Health officials and even the staunchest CDC champions lambasted the move. Some states ignore it.

The CDC’s own scientific advisers fear the agency’s multiple failures since February have destroyed the public’s confidence, which will be crucial to successful­ly roll out a vaccine.

“The leadership role of the CDC didn’t hold firm,” Brent Pawlecki, the chief health officer at Goodyear, told agency leaders in July as a panel of independen­t scientists reviewed the agency’s early response. “It has created a lot of confusion and unfortunat­ely a lot of distrust.”

The agency leaves towns blind

Cynthiana, Kentucky, a community of 6,400 residents without a four- lane road, took the CDC’s advice to continue life as normal.

No one paid much attention when the tenor with the best voice in the church choir called in sick after Sunday practice. Then, alto Julia Donohue’s migraine turned into a fever. The 28- yearold Walmart cake decorator, who liked to bake brownies for her church family, was airlifted to intensive care as her oxygen levels plunged.

Donohue’s positive test for COVID- 19 was the first confirmed case in the state. Kentucky joined more than 20 states reporting their earliest brushes with coronaviru­s during the first week of March.

As Kentucky’s case count ballooned, so did the fallout from the CDC’s missteps.

The area’s highest elected official, Harrison County Judge Alex Barnett, spent the next two weeks on a lunch tour to support businesses, visiting restaurant­s with his family. He snapped pictures posing with meals and posted them to Facebook to show people it was safe.

From the CDC’s news briefings, the coronaviru­s – related to the viral family that causes the common cold – sounded like a concern mostly for America’s distant big cities.

In public statements, leaders from Connersvil­le, Indiana; Hudson, New York; and Winston- Salem, North Carolina, all repeated the CDC’s “low risk” talking points.

The Kentucky hospital where Donohue first went to the ER had received no urgent warnings about community spread. More than 50 hospital workers did not wear masks or other protective gear, already in short supply, when they came into close contact with her.

“I don’t think people understood,” Crystal Miller, health director for four counties in the area, told USA TODAY. “We didn’t know.”

For the two weeks from when Donohue fell ill until the governor shut down the state, Barnett said he did not realize how much Cynthiana was at risk.

“I am no expert in health when it comes down to it. I am a farmer,” Barnett told USA TODAY. “I am an expert on growing cattle and tobacco. I rely on the CDC for guidance.”

Within weeks, the confirmed case count in the county, pop. 19,000, climbed to 11. An outbreak engulfed a nursing home.

Miller sent constant updates around the state about her area’s cases, tracking new informatio­n first on sticky notes, then a spreadshee­t. She worked 15- hour days, responding to text messages from colleagues until 2 a. m.

In email exchanges, Kentucky officials questioned nonsensica­l directives from the CDC, such as to tell doctor offices when testing for coronaviru­s to make sure “the air does not mix with other air.”

“This is next to impossible for provider practices to accomplish,” Andrea Flinchum in Kentucky’s Health Department told the CDC in an email March 10.

Later that month, Flinchum asked CDC headquarte­rs for advice on when and how to reuse respirator­s. A local representa­tive shared several studies, but more than a week went by without official word from the agency. “Waiting patiently to see this,” Flinchum wrote.

In another email exchange, Kevin Spicer, a federal CDC medical officer stationed in Kentucky, acknowledg­ed that he had been waiting two weeks for the agency to update its guidance on when and how to release people with COVID- 19 from hospitals and isolation.

Lacking anything official, Spicer shared a link to a Washington state document outlining more up- to- date practices. It was “not consistent with current CDC guidance,” he noted.

Long- term care facilities, especially vulnerable, became another point of confusion during the first wave of Kentucky’s outbreak in March. Matthew Penn, director of the CDC’s public health law program, told a lawyer in the state’s Health Department not to ban nursing home visitors outright.

“‘ Persuasion by education’ strategy may work best,” he wrote in an email. “Let people choose.”

Two days later, Gov. Andy Beshear banned nonessenti­al visits at nursing homes. That week, the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services, which regulates the facilities, advised nursing homes nationwide to do the same.

More than 2,600 nursing home residents have tested positive in Kentucky since March. At least 530 have died, according to CMS data. Across the country, more than 53,000 residents have died.

Muhammad Babar, a geriatrici­an at the University of Louisville advising the state on coronaviru­s care at long- term care facilities, told USA TODAY that following the CDC lawyer’s advice “would have resulted in a disaster.”

In its statement to USA TODAY, the CDC noted that the agency sent approximat­ely 1,300 public health experts to conduct more than 2,000 investigat­ions in states to combat the pandemic. The agency said its guidance was tailored around keeping communitie­s “informed of the evolving science and changes to guidance through routine, direct and transparen­t engagement­s.”

Kentucky’s first recognized victim, Donohue, recovered but still suffers from migraines and shortness of breath.

Another singer in her choir died after being infected with COVID- 19. For that, Donohue carries guilt that she might have unwittingl­y spread disease.

“I thought I didn’t have to worry about a killer virus,” she told USA TODAY.

CDC has had 75 years to prepare

The CDC was created 75 years ago to fight malaria. Americans pay billions for its protection against outbreaks of disease and chronic conditions.

Headquarte­red in Atlanta, removed from the direct line of politics, the federal agency employs thousands of public health experts, many embedded in local health department­s. Though it’s not primarily a regulatory agency, its science guides national medical practice.

When the novel coronaviru­s surfaced last winter, the CDC spent weeks repeating assurances that the risk to Americans was low. Many local authoritie­s, however, realized a crisis was coming – and they were unprepared.

“I just can’t see how this outbreak will be contained,” the Nebraska state epidemiolo­gist wrote Jan. 23. “I think this is going to be a big pandemic.”

In Kansas, the health director wrote to his staff Feb. 19: “Are we behind the power curve on planning?”

The CDC missed the early spread of the new coronaviru­s, blinded by its own decision to limit screening for the virus after its initial testing kit failed. That was one of the agency’s most consequent­ial scientific errors.

In California, Solano County public health officer Bela Matyas, working alongside CDC experts, had seen how people without symptoms could spread the disease in February, at an early quarantine site at Travis Air Force Base.

He said it was clear the agency’s travel screenings focused on obvious symptoms such as fever were not going to work.

“By definition, it was going to be a failure,” Matyas told USA TODAY.

The agency’s own director of global migration and quarantine knew it, too. Dr. Martin Cetron called the airport temperatur­e screening a “poorly designed control and detection strategy”

in internal emails later in the spring, resisting White House pressure to revive the program.

Health authoritie­s trying to protect their communitie­s pushed the CDC to loosen its restrictio­ns on early testing.

The CDC controlled the nation’s first tests for COVID- 19. Supplies were limited, and the agency designed restrictiv­e testing guidelines. Fever and respirator­y illness were not enough. The person had to have traveled to China or had contact with someone with a confirmed case.

Public health experts, including former CDC officials, accused the agency of creating guidelines on crucial measures such as testing based on supply shortages, not science.

“We were told you don’t need to be tested unless you have symptoms. That’s stupid and it’s always been stupid,” Jim Curran, an epidemiolo­gist at Emory University who led the CDC’s research into HIV for 15 years, told USA TODAY. “Policy shouldn’t be based on scarcity.”

One hospital in Seattle, the site of the first major U. S. outbreak, used paper and some spare space at the nurse’s station to track changes to the CDC testing guidance that often came unannounce­d and without clarifications, emergency room physician Sachita Shah told USA TODAY. They taped paper after paper onto a computer monitor. The CDC told the hospital to test patients only if they had symptoms and had traveled to China; then Japan and South Korea; then Iran and Italy.

By the time the agency broadened the criteria to those without travel histories, the hospital had turned away several patients who needed testing.

“CDC was too slow,” Shah said. “They should have been on top of this.”

The case in Northern California, known as Patient Zero, exposed how wrong the CDC had been to test so narrowly.

Doctors at UC Davis Medical Center pleaded for days to test the woman on a ventilator. She suffered from an unexplaine­d respirator­y disease yet had not recently traveled. The CDC’s testing process did not allow for the possibilit­y that the virus was spreading in the community.

“We weren’t even able to test for it,” CEO David Lubarsky said. “It was a failed algorithm.”

The CDC said in its statement provided to USA TODAY that the early testing protocol was “based on the epidemiolo­gy of the disease at the time.” CDC senior officer Nancy Messonnier said in February that the agency greenlight­ed testing for the patient when it became aware of the case. Clinicians and a health official involved said they lost days pushing for access.

Patient Zero ultimately led the agency to rewrite its testing guidance. By then, more than 200 workers at two hospitals that treated her had risked exposure.

So many staff members had to be quarantine­d that one of the hospitals temporaril­y shut down its intensive care unit.

The CDC’s leadership went on to fail Latino, Black and Native American communitie­s and low- income neighborho­ods. Experts said minority population­s often were excluded from the policymaki­ng process. They are more than twice as likely to be infected as non- Hispanic whites – and nearly five times as likely to be hospitaliz­ed.

“We were not prepared despite everything we know about public health disparitie­s,” K. Vish Viswanath, a health communicat­ion professor at Harvard and an independen­t scientist on the CDC’s advisory board, told the agency during a panel review in July. “That to me is inexcusabl­e.”

Donald Flores, a maintenanc­e worker at the hospital that treated Patient Zero, developed symptoms in quarantine but was never tested. He worries every workday that he is not protected.

“Somebody,” Flores said, “doesn’t give a damn.”

“You get to where you don’t really know what to believe.”

Teresa Johnson, who says she has lost faith in the CDC after she and her husband were quarantine­d but not tested

‘ Free to move along’

The breakdown in the agency’s communicat­ion with communitie­s contribute­d to the failure of the Trump administra­tion’s signature defense against the pandemic: restrictio­ns on travel from hot spots in China and later around the world.

Authoritie­s expected the CDC to provide basic informatio­n – names, contact informatio­n and arrival time – so they could track travelers. Time and again, the CDC failed to do so.

In early February, Nevada state epidemiolo­gist Melissa Peek- Bullock learned from the local news about an airplane carrying three people who had been traveling in China, which was about to land in Las Vegas. The travelers posed a threat to U. S. cities, based on the CDC’s criteria.

When Peek- Bullock called the agency seeking the passengers’ names and contact informatio­n, she was met with hostility, according to interviews and documents from the state Health Department.

At the Los Angeles airport, where the flight had been temporaril­y redirected, officials with the CDC’s quarantine and mitigation division told her they were unaware of the requiremen­ts drawn up by their own colleagues.

In a call to the CDC’s emergency hotline, Peek- Bullock said, she spoke with a representa­tive who refused to identify the passengers, saying they were “free to move along their way.”

Increasing­ly desperate, she explained her fear that they could place all of Las Vegas at risk. The CDC representa­tive hung up on her, Peek- Bullock said.

“It’s hard to imagine that would happen,” she told USA TODAY. “Truly, you just want to get the informatio­n that you need to do the right thing.”

Afterward, the head of Nevada’s Health Department, Richard Whitley, wrote to Redfield, the CDC director: “The lack of communicat­ion in this circumstan­ce created frustratio­n and confusion for all those involved.”

Senior CDC official José Montero responded that the agency was trying to educate all of its divisions on the latest guidelines and requiremen­ts to share traveler informatio­n. He wrote that the CDC “regrets that Nevada Department of Health and Human Services had difficulty initially obtaining this informatio­n.”

The shortcomin­gs exposed by a pandemic had been years in the making.

The agency knew it had work to do around data management, scientific readiness and domestic operations after reviewing its response to emergencie­s such as the Ebola and Zika outbreaks, according to minutes from a meeting in 2018 of outside experts who advise the CDC’s Center for Preparedne­ss and Response.

The CDC acknowledg­ed that the COVID- 19 crisis has exposed weaknesses in U. S. health preparedne­ss.

“This pandemic has spotlighte­d shortcomin­gs within our nation’s public health system, including the need for long- term and sustained funding for state and local health department­s,” the agency said in its statement.

For months, the agency struggled to gather testing and reporting data from states and cities. In June, federal auditors at the Government Accountabi­lity Office faulted the agency for “making it more difficult to track and know the number of infections, mitigate their effects, and inform decisions on reopening communitie­s.”

William Schaffner, an infectious disease specialist at Vanderbilt University and a former CDC investigat­or, told USA TODAY the scientists working on HIV do not coordinate with those concentrat­ing on preventing and treating other sexually transmitte­d diseases.

“The CDC is notoriousl­y siloed. People stay in their own unit and only modest communicat­ion,” he said. “The silos go to the top.”

When states and counties asked questions related to COVID- 19, the CDC often either punted decisions back to them or failed to provide answers.

In early February, Vermont’s state epidemiolo­gist, Patsy Kelso, emailed the CDC twice asking how the state would learn about travelers who fly into Canada, then drive over the border undetected.

“I don’t believe we ever got a response,” Kelso told USA TODAY.

Three days later, CDC officials acknowledg­ed internally that they failed to prevent the influx of potentiall­y infected travelers.

“Hearing word of people already leaking through screening system,” Penn, the director of the CDC’s public health law program, wrote to colleagues and lawyers in several state health department­s. “Knew it would not be perfect, but it has begun.”

The agency told employees at the Los Angeles airport not to screen private charter planes, which are “mainly for rich people.” Flight attendants in Dallas witnessed travelers from China entering without a second look. “The customs agent told them ‘ not to worry about it,’ ” state officials wrote to the CDC in February.

That month, as the University of Kansas prepared to host a basketball game that would fill its 16,000- seat arena, state health director Lee Norman learned that a student who had traveled to Wuhan, China, showed symptoms of the coronaviru­s.

While the student and his roommate quarantine­d in an apartment on campus, the CDC did not tell state health department­s about other travelers who might have come into the state from Wuhan.

“CDC not able to let us know about travelers that have already come,” Farah Ahmed, the epidemiolo­gist at the state’s Department of Health, wrote to colleagues.

Looking back, Norman told USA TODAY, “we just never had a great deal of informatio­n.”

The agency did not manage to ensure the safety of more than 2,000 travelers on a single cruise ship, the Grand Princess, after an outbreak led to quarantine­s at military bases in March. Many were allowed to go home without COVID- 19 testing or before results came back.

“A lot of breakdown in communicat­ion between the CDC and us,” said Teresa Johnson, a Grand Princess passenger who was quarantine­d in Georgia with her husband, less than 20 miles from CDC headquarte­rs. Both had symptoms but were not tested before heading home.

Johnson said she has lost trust in the CDC altogether: “You get to where you don’t really know what to believe.”

CDC downplays reality

State and local authoritie­s are supposed to look to the CDC in a public health crisis. But records and interviews show the agency, under political pressure, repeatedly tried to minimize the crisis.

The CDC puts out a weekly scientific journal, the Morbidity and Mortality Weekly Report, to inform doctors and scientists about emerging evidence and critical guidance. Local leaders rely on the unvarnishe­d scientific conclusion­s to make sound policy.

In March, the CDC watered down an MMWR by deleting a Washington state epidemiolo­gist’s explicit call for widespread testing – not just symptom screening – to prevent outbreaks in assisted- living and long- term care facilities.

“I would be careful promoting widespread testing,” the CDC editor noted in an internal document.

At the time, the United States was still struggling to test widely enough, despite a White House pledge to rapidly expand testing capacity.

The published article merely listed a half dozen mitigation efforts that are important, including “resident and staff member testing.”

By summer, White House officials had started screening the MMWR reports, receiving full drafts before publicatio­n.

Former CDC leaders said that practice undermines good science.

“It’s unconscion­able that that’s happening,” said Nancy Cox, former director of the CDC’s influenza division, who worked at the agency for 37 years.

The agency tried to soften a public health officer’s early warning about the coming spread of the virus in Placer County, California.

“You mentioned community spread,” CDC press officer Scott Pauley said in an email exchange about a Placer news release in early March, a day before the county reported the state’s first death, “and that could lead people to think you currently have community spread cases.”

Dr. Aimee Sisson, who had worked in the state Health Department, pushed ahead anyway, including a strong warning in her news release: “We expect to see additional cases in coming days, including cases of community spread, not linked to travel.”

She told USA TODAY she felt confident the virus was already “out of the bag.”

Behind the scenes, the CDC had known the same for at least a week. “We knew then that detecting any community- acquired cases meant that the virus was already circulatin­g in the U. S.,” senior officials wrote later in an internal CDC memo.

The Trump administra­tion began to publicly sideline the agency and attempt to overrule its decisions.

The White House weakened the CDC’s early no- sail orders for cruise ships in April. It pushed for a return to the failed public health strategy of airport fever screenings over the CDC’s objections and delayed its recommenda­tions for reopening schools and businesses as “overly prescripti­ve” in May. It prodded the CDC to explore blaming Latino immigrants for causing regional surges in June.

“CDC’s role always is going to be defined by an administra­tion,” CDC scientific adviser and longtime public health expert Alonzo Plough said in an interview. “Their role as defined currently was unlike any that I had seen in my 25 years of practice.”

In a statement to USA TODAY, White House spokesman Judd Deere denied that the Trump administra­tion has ignored science. He said that every decision made by the CDC has been driven by data.

“This dishonest narrative that the media and Democrats have created that politics is influencing approvals or decisions is not only false but is a danger to the American public,” Deere said.

After pressure from the White House, the CDC blindsided health officials by revising its testing guidance yet again to say that people exposed to the virus but not showing symptoms do not need to be tested.

The agency said that shift still allows for testing when public health officials and doctors think “there is the need for action tied to a diagnosis – for example isolating infected individual­s and quarantini­ng close contacts.”

Sara Cody, the public health officer in Santa Clara County, California, was bewildered.

Testing is critical on COVID- 19 because symptoms alone are not a guide to who poses a risk of spreading infection, she said.

That was the type of public health tenet that Cody learned from the CDC, which she has long revered. She will keep testing, she said, despite its new guidance.

“This premier public health agency that trained me, and has produced so many public health leaders, is now really not able to implement their mission, which in part is to support state and locals,” she told USA TODAY. “It is extraordin­arily sad.”

 ?? GETTY IMAGES ?? CDC Director Robert Redfield
GETTY IMAGES CDC Director Robert Redfield
 ??  ?? Harrison County Judge Alex Barnett, center, recites the Pledge of Allegiance before a virtual meeting of court magistrate­s in Cynthiana, Ky. Joining him are Treasurer Melody McClure and Magistrate Dwayne Florence. JACK GRUBER/ USA TODAY
Harrison County Judge Alex Barnett, center, recites the Pledge of Allegiance before a virtual meeting of court magistrate­s in Cynthiana, Ky. Joining him are Treasurer Melody McClure and Magistrate Dwayne Florence. JACK GRUBER/ USA TODAY
 ??  ?? Matyas
Matyas
 ??  ?? Donohue
Donohue
 ?? MICHAEL HOLAHAN/ USA TODAY NETWORK ?? Georgia residents Teresa and John Johnson were exposed to the coronaviru­s on a cruise during one of the first outbreaks.
MICHAEL HOLAHAN/ USA TODAY NETWORK Georgia residents Teresa and John Johnson were exposed to the coronaviru­s on a cruise during one of the first outbreaks.
 ??  ?? Sisson
Sisson
 ??  ?? Shah
Shah
 ??  ?? Viswanath
Viswanath

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States