The advice marks a reversal of the agency's previous position
recommending testing for all close contacts of people diagnosed with
COVID-19.
Admiral Brett Giroir, the assistant secretary for health at the
Department of Health and Human Services (HHS), said the goal was
"appropriate testing," not more testing for its own sake, and that
there was no political pressure from the administration behind the
decision.
CNN and The New York Times reported on Wednesday that U.S. public
health officials were ordered by high-level members of the Trump
administration to push forward with the changes.
“This was a product produced by the scientific and medical people
that was discussed extensively at the task force," said Giroir. The
task force is led by Vice President Mike Pence.
The president of the American Medical Association, the largest U.S.
association of physicians, said the advice could accelerate the
spread of the virus.
"Suggesting that people without symptoms, who have known exposure to
COVID-positive individuals, do not need testing is a recipe for
community spread and more spikes in coronavirus," AMA President
Susan Bailey said in a statement.
Anthony Fauci, the top U.S. government infectious disease expert,
told CNN he was having surgery during discussion of the change.
"I am concerned about the interpretation of these recommendations
and worried it will give people the incorrect assumption that
asymptomatic spread is not of great concern. In fact it is," he
said.
The Trump administration has been criticized for its handling of
COVID-19 testing, with many states falling short of the volume
needed to help contain the virus during major outbreaks.
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Trump told a rally in June testing is a "double-edged" sword because it leads to
more cases being discovered, causing the United States to appear worse off than
it would otherwise. He added that he urged officials to "slow the testing down,
please." A White House official at the time told Reuters that the remark was a
joke.
The United States has had more than 5 million diagnosed cases of COVID-19 and
nearly 180,000 people have died.
California on Wednesday announced a deal with PerkinElmer to nearly double the
state's testing capacity, and New York Governor Andrew Cuomo quickly challenged
the assertion that politics played no role in the change.
“We need public health people who do public health and not politics, and we’re
going to disregard the CDC guidance totally,” he told MSNBC.
Tests of asymptomatic people conducted too early to accurately detect the virus
can lead to a false sense of security and potentially help spread the virus,
Giroir said.
Health experts said the move could hurt contact tracing efforts to prevent virus
spread.
“It’s inexplicable why this guidance suddenly changed. There is no new science
that we’re aware of," Dr. Leana Wen, former Baltimore health commissioner and
visiting professor at George Washington University Milken Institute School of
Public Health told CNN. "We need far more testing, not less."
(Additional reporting by Caroline Humer and Peter Henderson; Editing by Bill
Berkrot, Alistair Bell and Tom Brown)
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