Sentinel & Enterprise

Baker meets with Trump COVID-19 coordinato­r

Doctor meets in private after public stops in Cambridge, and at BU

- By Matt Murphy

Days after Gov. Charlie Baker called President Donald Trump “incredibly irresponsi­ble” for downplayin­g the seriousnes­s of COVID-19, the governor met at the Statehouse with one of the White House’s senior coronaviru­s response leaders, who was in the state to hear from university presidents about college testing.

Dr. Deborah Birx, the White House’s coronaviru­s response coordinato­r, visited Boston University on Friday morning before traveling across the river to Cambridge where she took part in a roundtable talk at the Broad Institute with area university presidents to learn more about how testing is being handled on college campuses.

Birx then visited the Statehouse where she met with Baker in his office for roughly an hour, but did not take questions entering or leaving. She wore a mask in public, both in Cambridge and at the Statehouse.

“I wear this mask to tell every American I think this is important,” Birx said during a press conference outside the Broad Institute, according to WBZ News.

Baker earlier this week criticized Trump for his personal behavior toward the virus, including the president’s decision upon returning to the White House from Walter Reed Medical Center after his COVID-19 diagnosis to remove his mask and record a video in which he told Americans “don’t let it dominate you.”

“I think it’s incredibly irresponsi­ble for the president or any other public official to ignore the advice of so many of the folks in the public health, epidemi

ological and infectious disease community who have made it absolutely clear to us all, time and time again, that this is a contagion — it is massively contagious — and it will wreak havoc on many people if they become infected,” Baker said.

Neither Baker’s office nor the White House provided details about what the two discussed during their meeting, but Birx was visiting as part of her nationwide tour of college campuses to learn more about their testing procedures. She was in Hartford on Thursday on the city campus of the University of Connecticu­t, and she also met with Gov. Ned Lamont.

Birx has expressed concerns about some of the trends she’s observed in recent weeks across the Northeast, likening it to what happened in the South over the summer as people took shelter from the heat indoors in air conditioni­ng.

“We do see some of those early signs that we saw across the South after Memorial Day, a sense that there’s early, asymptomat­ic silent spread occurring in communitie­s,” Birx said in Cambridge, according to CBS Boston.

“Now is the time to act in the Northeast and that means we have to change

our personal behaviors,” she said.

Like Baker, Birx blamed social gatherings and relaxed personal behavior, rather than workplaces or restaurant­s, for the recent spike in cases across Massachuse­tts and other New England states.

“That’s what we saw happen in the South. People let down their guard when they were with friends and family and they took off their mask and they shared dinner or they shared drinks inside and those became spreading events,” Birx said. “And so to the communitie­s that are seeing upticks, please bring that same discipline that you’re bringing to the public spaces into your households and really limit engagement with others outside your immediate household.”

The Broad Institute, which is an independen­t research institutio­n affiliated with Harvard University and M.I.T., is one of the state’s main COVID-19 testing facilities, and has processed over 3 million tests since March. The institute is also providing testing support for over 100 public and private colleges in the area, and processes as many as 70,000 tests a day.

The White House did not share a list of who par

ticipated in the roundtable with Birx Friday morning, but before her visit to the Broad Institute, she and Centers for Disease Control epidemiolo­gist Irum Zaidi toured BU’s Clinical Testing Lab at the Kilachand Center for Integrated Life Sciences & Engineerin­g with BU President Robert Brown and testing lab head Catherine Klapperich, according to the university.

The lab at Boston University has processed more than 200,000 tests in less than three months, with some undergradu­ate students who have returned to campus for in-person instructio­n this fall getting tested at least twice weekly.

In the last week, Boston University reported 30,602 tests of 21,061 individual students, faculty and staff, with a positive test rate of less than 1 percent in all categories. The university reported two positive tests on Thursday, bringing its total since July 27 to 143 from the 211,615 tests conducted.

Thirteen Boston University students are currently in isolation.

State health officials on Wednesday reported 211 new confirmed cases of COVID-19 associated with higher education, bringing the total to 1,058.

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 ?? NICOLAUS CZARNECKI / BOSTON HERALD ?? Dr. Deborah Birx speaks with the media after attending a roundtable with local college and university presidents at the Broad Institute in Cambridge on Friday. Later she met privately at the Statehouse with Gov. Charlie Baker.
NICOLAUS CZARNECKI / BOSTON HERALD Dr. Deborah Birx speaks with the media after attending a roundtable with local college and university presidents at the Broad Institute in Cambridge on Friday. Later she met privately at the Statehouse with Gov. Charlie Baker.

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