Do social distancing better, White House doctor tells Americans. Trump
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[April 03, 2020]
By Jeff Mason
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Dr. Deborah Birx,
the coordinator of the White House task force on the coronavirus, had a
message for Americans on Thursday: do better at social distancing.
President Donald Trump didn't like the message.
At what has become a daily briefing by the president and his advisers,
Birx, a highly respected expert in global health, has served the role of
explainer, walking journalists and the public through the data behind
federal recommendations designed to slow the virus's spread.
Just a couple days into a new, 30-day extension of the guidelines, Birx
said data showed not enough people were following them. The
recommendations, first unveiled on March 16, encourage people not to
gather in groups larger than 10 and to avoid dining in restaurants or
bars.
"When we said that, now over 16 days ago, that was serious," Birx said,
noting that the people who were now becoming sick would have gotten the
virus after the guidelines first went out.
But the president, standing near the White House podium where Birx was
speaking, interceded.
"Deborah, aren't you referring to just a few states, because many of
those states are dead flat," Trump said, referring to states where the
virus had not taken off dramatically and pushed up the national "curve"
of deaths.
Birx responded that it was true that some states were flat but that an
outbreak in a new city would spoil that.
Trump has faced criticism for playing down the outbreak in its initial
stages. He said early on that the virus was under control and repeatedly
compared it to the seasonal flu.
Last week he argued the time was right to re-open the U.S. economy,
complaining that the cure was worse than the problem and setting a goal
of economic rebirth by Easter on April 12.
On Sunday he announced that he had ditched that plan after Birx and Dr.
Anthony Fauci, director of the National Institute of Allergy and
Infectious Diseases, convinced him that projections showed more than 2
million people in the United States could die without further stringent
measures.
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White House Coronavirus response coordinator Dr. Deborah Birx speaks
during a news conference in the Rose Garden of the White House in
Washington, U.S., March 29, 2020. REUTERS/Al Drago
But after a few days of adopting a more somber tone, the president
on Thursday seemed chagrined that Birx was focusing on areas where
those measures had not been followed sufficiently rather than on
states in which the virus had not taken off.
"It's hard to blame flat-liners for not doing a good job," Trump
said, sparking Birx to express with emotion, "No, no, I don't want
to say that!"
Trump made clear he did not want headlines suggesting that not
enough was being done, and he went on to explain repeatedly what he
believed Birx meant as she remained standing on the stage.
"She wasn't talking about the average of everything, she was talking
about an individual state," Trump said.
"Our states, generally speaking - it's like lots of different
countries all over - we have, many of those 'countries' are doing a
phenomenal job. They're really flat, and I think that's what you
meant."
Birx responded simply: "Thank you, sir."
She went on to say, nonetheless, that not all U.S. states had
followed the guidelines.
"We know what can be done. And others are doing it and most of the
people in the United States are doing it. It's our communities, it's
every American that has to make these changes," she said.
Trump weighed in again.
"We've done, I think on average, really phenomenally as a country."
The U.S. death toll from COVID-19, the respiratory illness caused by
coronavirus, stood at 5,821 by Thursday evening, with more than
241,000 positive cases across all 50 states.
(Reporting by Jeff Mason; Editing by Simon Cameron-Moore)
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