The Denver Post

Trump undercuts experts again

- By Jill Colvin and Mike Stobbe

WASHINGTON» The White House seating chart spoke volumes.

When the president convened a roundtable this week on how to reopen schools safely with coronaviru­s cases rising, the seats surroundin­g him were filled with parents, teachers and top White House officials, including the first and second ladies.

But the leader of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, usually the leader of disease fighting efforts, was relegated to secondary seating in the back with the children of parents who had been invited to speak.

Intentiona­l or not, it was a telling indication of the regard that President Donald Trump has for

the government’s top health profession­als as he pushes the country to move past the coronaviru­s. Whatever they say, he’s determined to revive the battered economy and resuscitat­e his reelection chances, even as U.S. hospitaliz­ations and deaths climb.

Confirmed COVID-19 cases in the U.S. hit the 3 million mark this week, with more than 130,000 deaths now recorded. The surge has led to new equipment shortages as well as long lines at testing sites and delayed results.

States are responding. At midnight Friday, Nevada was to enforce new restrictio­ns on bars and restaurant­s in several areas including Las Vegas and Reno after a spike in cases. And New Mexico’s Gov. Michelle Lujan Grisham said her state was halting indoor restaurant service, closing state parks to nonresiden­ts and suspending autumn contact sports at schools in response to surging infections within its boundaries and neighborin­g Texas and Arizona.

Yet Trump paints a rosy picture of progress and ramps up his attacks on his government’s own public health officials, challengin­g the CDC’s school-reopening guidelines and publicly underminin­g the nation’s top expert on infectious diseases, Anthony Fauci.

“Dr. Fauci is a nice man, but he’s made a lot of mistakes,” Trump told Fox News Channel host Sean Hannity in a call-in interview Thursday, pointing, in part, to changes in guidance on maskwearin­g over time.

In his latest beef with the CDC, the president accused the Atlanta-based federal agency of “asking schools to do very impractica­l things” to reopen. The recommende­d measures include spacing students’ desks 6 feet apart, staggering start and arrival times, and teaching kids effective hygiene measures to try to prevent infections.

After Trump’s scolding comment, Vice President Mike Pence announced Wednesday that the CDC would be “issuing new guidance” that would “give all-new tools to our schools.”

But the agency’s director, Dr. Robert Redfield, pushed back amid criticism that he was bowing to pressure from the president.

“I want to clarify, really what we’re providing is different reference documents . ... It’s not a revision of the guidelines,” he said the next day. Indeed, draft documents obtained by The Associated Press seem to confirm Redfield’s assertion, although officials stress the drafts are still under review.

Deputy White House press secretary Judd Deere issued a supportive statement Friday: “The White House and CDC have been working together in partnershi­p since the very beginning of this pandemic to carry out the president’s highest priority: the health and safety of the American public.”

But the flap has touched a nerve amid increasing concern over how the administra­tion has sidelined, muzzled and seemed to derail the CDC. Repeatedly now, the administra­tion has shelved or altered CDC draft guidance, or even told the the agency to take down guidance it has already posted. That includes in early March, when administra­tion officials overruled CDC doctors who wanted to recommend that elderly and physically fragile Americans be advised not to fly on commercial airlines because of the pandemic.

In May, officials removed some recommenda­tions for reopening religious events hours after posting them, deleting guidance that discourage­d choir gatherings and shared communion cups.

“Here we have at this time the 21st century’s biggest public health crisis, and the CDC has been shunted aside,” said William Schaffner, a professor of preventive medicine and infectious diseases at the Vanderbilt University School of Medicine in Nashville. They have “been sidelined and their voices — their clear, consistent, transparen­t voices — have been muffled or even completely silenced.”

While Trump has led the way, he’s not the only one sending messages contrary to those of public health officials. At a briefing this week by the White House coronaviru­s task force, Pence’s message to those in states such as Texas, Florida, California and Arizona where cases are rising, was simple: “We believe the takeaway from this for every American, particular­ly in those states that are impacted, is: Keep doing what you’re doing.”

Not so, said Dr. Deborah Birx, the task force’s response coordinato­r. She said those states should instead close bars, end indoor dining and limit gatherings “back down to our phase one recommenda­tion, which was 10 or less.”

Experts warn the U.S. has suffered from a lack of clear, sciencebas­ed messaging during the pandemic — typically provided by the CDC. But Trump and the White House have kept the agency at arm’s length since the early days, when it botched developmen­t of a test kit, delaying tracking efforts.

Trump also grew enraged in late February when Dr. Nancy Messonnier — a CDC official who was then leading the agency’s coronaviru­s response but has since been sidelined — contradict­ed statements by other federal officials that the virus was contained.

“It’s not so much a question of if this will happen anymore, but rather more a question of exactly when,” Messonnier said, sending stocks plunging and infuriatin­g Trump, even though she proved correct.

Many outside the White House also fault Redfield, who was appointed two years ago, for failing to adequately assert himself and his agency. Redfield does not have a close personal relationsh­ip with the president and has rubbed some at the White House the wrong way.

This week, before his later, tougher comments, Redfield appeared to fold before Trump’s complaints, saying that the CDC guidelines should not “be used as a rationale to keep schools closed.”

“This is the opposite of good public health practice,” said Carl Bergstrom, a University of Washington evolutiona­ry biologist who studies emerging infectious diseases. “You put guidelines out there about what’s necessary to keep people safe and then you expect people to follow them.”

The school reopening controvers­y is the latest chapter in a depressing tale, said Jason Schwartz, government health policy expert at Yale University:

“This reflects a failure on the part of the CDC director to defend his agency, his scientists and the science through the pandemic.”

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