Amid growing concerns about hantavirus, Trump haunted by repeated misjudgments
Last Thursday, during a presidential field trip to the Lincoln Memorial Reflecting Pool, a reporter asked Donald Trump whether he had received a hantavirus briefing. He acknowledged that he had. Asked what he’d learned, the president said he and his team “hope” the matter is under control.
When a reporter quickly followed up, “Should Americans be concerned it’s going to spread?” Trump replied, “I hope not.”
The exchange didn’t exactly inspire confidence. Nevertheless, a day later, during another White House Q&A, he added that “very good people” have looked into the threat and concluded that hantavirus transmission is difficult. “We hope that’s true,” Trump said.
For those with PTSD from the Republican’s failure to respond responsibly to the Covid-19 crisis six years ago, his unscripted comments were hardly reassuring. But more important than what Trump has said is what he has done. The Associated Press reported:
No quick dispatching of disease investigators. No televised news conference to inform the public. No timely health alerts to doctors.
In the midst of a hantavirus outbreak that involves Americans and is making headlines around the world, the U.S. government’s top public health agency, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, has been uncharacteristically missing in action, according to a number of experts.
While the United States has traditionally taken a leadership role in response to issues like these, the AP report added, “It has been health experts in other countries … who have been dealing primarily with the outbreak in the past week.”
Lawrence Gostin, an international public health expert at Georgetown University, told the AP, “The CDC is not even a player. I’ve never seen that before.”
In hindsight, perhaps uprooting and destabilizing the nation’s public health infrastructure wasn’t such a good idea.
Indeed, there is no real mystery here. As Tara C. Smith, a professor of epidemiology at Kent State University’s School of Public Health, explained in a piece for MS NOW:
Scientific expertise in virology, epidemiology, diagnostics, environmental sampling and basic medicine are critical to the response. Unfortunately, funding for our key scientific agencies has been slashed and thousands of scientists have been fired by Trump and his health and human services secretary, Robert F. Kennedy Jr. Other weaknesses in our federal agencies include the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention having no permanent director, and the interim head, Jay Bhattacharya, being busy running the National Institutes of Health. Media reports citing CDC employees say the agency is “flying blind” and work has “slowed to a crawl.” Many NIH and National Science Foundation grants that have been cut focused on topics of infectious disease, vaccinology and pandemic preparedness, reducing our knowledge and readiness for the next pandemic.
Trump’s decision to abandon the World Health Organization hasn’t exactly helped, either.
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