USA TODAY US Edition

Another view: We’re putting boots on ground to help states

- Alex M. Azar II Alex M. Azar II is U.S. secretary of Health and Human Services.

Since the first reports of COVID-19 in the United States, the Trump administra­tion has been putting boots on the ground to help states combat it.

When Washington state identified the first case in January and requested help from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, a team was on its way within hours to help trace contacts. On Jan. 30, with just seven U.S. cases confirmed, Trump administra­tion leaders had our first call with governors to advise them and listen to their needs. This cooperatio­n slowed the spread of the virus and helped us understand it better.

Now, every nation with a COVID-19 outbreak has had to move from containing the virus to mitigation strategies like social distancing. The goal is to drive the spread down to where we can trace contacts of new cases. President Donald Trump and Vice President Mike Pence have led a whole-of-government effort, working with the states, to get us to that point.

The White House Coronaviru­s Task Force, in concert with the Federal Emergency Management Agency and Health and Human Services, has been preparing for weeks to get states more expertise, staff and funding to execute on contact tracing and other public health efforts.

States are already using the president’s evidence-based guidelines for reopening the economy, working with the hundreds of CDC staff already embedded in or recently deployed to health department­s, and collaborat­ing closely with FEMA and HHS to get more funding and supplies.

We will support every state and territory in reopening. CDC is deploying field teams tailored to the needs of states, as requested, to assist with contact tracing plans and advise on tools like digital technology and serologic testing. Health department­s will need thousands of new workers or contractor­s to do the legwork of contact tracing, which is why the Trump administra­tion just disbursed $631 million to support hiring and other needs, on top of $560 million provided in March.

Last week, President Trump secured $25 billion in more funding for testing and related work, including contact tracing, and the administra­tion will send at least $11 billion of that to states and other partners on the ground. The administra­tion takes new steps daily to help states expand testing, from identifyin­g unused lab capacity to providing new options for sample collection.

The president’s all-of-America approach has meant federal agencies working hand in hand with state and local government­s to slow the virus’ spread. The president will use that same approach to take the next step: protecting Americans while we open our country again.

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