Coronavirus has brought US 'to its knees', says CDC director
A US public health chief told Congress on Tuesday that
coronavirus has “brought this nation to its knees” as America struggles with
more than 2.3 million confirmed cases and more than 121,000 deaths so far.
Dr Robert Redfield, director of the federal Centers for
Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), told a hearing in Washington that core
public health capabilities in the US had been vastly underfunded for a long
time and needed urgent investment.
“We have all done the
best that we can do to tackle this virus and the reality is that it’s brought
this nation to its knees,” Redfield told the House energy and commerce
committee.
“We are probably going to spend $7tn because of one little
virus,” he added.
He said that the US had “used the capacity that we have” to
confront the pandemic but that “the critics will be there”.
The Trump administration has been heavily criticized for a
slow and shaky early response to coronavirus as it spread from Asia and Europe
to the US in early 2020, especially as Donald Trump repeatedly downplayed the
risk of Covid-19 and the damage it would come to wreak upon the US.
Redfield said that the US at local, state and federal level
has chronically underinvested in “the core capabilities of public health”,
including data analysis, “laboratory resilience”, the public health workforce,
emergency response capabilities and “our global health security around the
world”, adding that “now is the time” to step up spending.
Earlier in the hearing, Dr Anthony Fauci, the US’s top
infectious disease expert testified that the country will be doing more
Covid-19 testing, not less, hours after the president insisted he was serious
when he said at a rally at the weekend that he had called for testing to slow
down in the US.
Coronavirus cases have continued to rise in about half of US
states, but Trump said at the rally in Tulsa, Oklahoma, that increased testing
was making the US look bad and that he had asked staff to slow down. His press
secretary later said the remarks were “in jest” but the president stood by them
on Tuesday, telling reporters that the comments weren’t a joke.
Speaking to the congressional committee hours later,
however, Fauci said: “I know for sure that to my knowledge none of us have ever
been told to slow down on testing. That just is a fact. In fact, we will be
doing more testing.”
Fauci, a member of the White House coronavirus task force,
spoke to the committee alongside Redfield; the head of the Food and Drug
Administration, Stephen Hahn; and a top official at the Department of Health
and Human Services, Brett Giroir.
Fauci last testified before Congress in May, when states
were still mostly shut down. Since then staggered reopenings have taken place
across the country, and several states are seeing a concerning increase in
cases.
He said the state of coronavirus in the US was overall a
“mixed bag”, in part because of the country’s huge size and diversity.
He said some areas, such as New York City, had done well to
rein in cases by following the government’s guidelines for reopening, but said
the “disturbing surge” in infections in other parts of the country was very
concerning.
“The next couple of
weeks are going to be critical to address those surges we’re seeing,” Fauci
said, specifically citing the increase in cases in Florida, Arizona and Texas.
The concerns shared by top health leaders at the hearing
contradicted Trump’s continued efforts to downplay the effects of Covid-19.
At least eight Trump campaign staffers tested positive for
Covid-19 in Tulsa, where Trump told a campaign rally that he had asked
administration officials to slow down testing, because too many positive cases
are turning up.
After administration figures including White House press
secretary Kayleigh McEnany suggested the comments weren’t serious or were a
joke, Trump on Tuesday said: “I never kid.”
“Testing is a double-edged sword,” Trump told reporters.
“One way, it shows you have cases and in another way you find out where the
cases are and you do a good job.”
When asked individually at the congressional hearing if the
president had asked the US health leaders to slow down testing, they all
responded “no”.
At the time of the May hearing, Fauci was one of many
speakers to testify from a video feed at home. This time, the speakers were in
person for this hearing.
In the chamber, the men sat with tubs of disinfectant wipes
and hand sanitizer pumps next to their nameplates. While committee members and
speakers are usually packed tight, people sat at a distance, wearings masks,
which they removed to speak.
Fauci told the committee he was “cautiously optimistic” that
a vaccine would be ready at the end of the year or early 2021.
The group also expressed concern about what could happen if
coronavirus cases were still high when flu season arrives in the autumn.
In a prepared statement, the experts said such a collision
could again burden the country’s healthcare system.
“If there is Covid-19 and flu activity at the same time,
this could place a tremendous burden on the healthcare system related to bed
occupancy, laboratory testing needs, personal protective equipment and
healthcare worker safety,” the statement said.




