So far, no spike in coronavirus in places reopening, U.S. health
secretary says
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[May 18, 2020]
By Doina Chiacu
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - U.S. authorities are
not yet seeing spikes in coronavirus cases in places that are reopening
but it was still too early to determine such trends, health secretary
Alex Azar said on Sunday.
"We are seeing that in places that are opening, we're not seeing this
spike in cases," Azar said on CNN's "State of the Union" program. "We
still see spikes in some areas that are, in fact, closed."
However, Azar said identifying and reporting new cases takes time. A
critical part of reopening will be surveillance of flu-like symptoms in
the population and other hospital admissions data, as well as testing of
asymptomatic individuals, he said.
"It's still early days," Azar cautioned in an interview with CBS' "Face
the Nation." He said data will take some time to come in from states
that reopened early such as Georgia and Florida.
Nearly all 50 U.S. states have begun to allow some businesses to reopen
and residents to move more freely, but only 14 states have met the
federal government's guidelines for lifting measures aimed at fighting
the pandemic, according to a Reuters analysis.
The top Democrat in Congress, House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, said it was
impossible to know the trajectory of the virus, which has killed close
to 90,000 Americans, without more testing.
"We have no idea the size of this challenge to our country because we
have not sufficiently tested," Pelosi said on CBS' "Face the Nation."
Legislation passed by the House of Representatives on Friday would
provide for the keys to a successful reopening: testing, tracing and
treatment, she said. Republicans have called the bill dead on arrival in
the Senate.
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U.S. Secretary of Health and Human Services Alex Azar speaks during
a news briefing on the administration's response to the coronavirus
at the White House in Washington, U.S., March 15, 2020.
REUTERS/Joshua Roberts/File Photo
"We haven't had a plan. Let's go forward in a bipartisan way to have
a plan, a plan to test," she said.
The United States has lagged far behind most other industrialized
nations in coronavirus testing that public health officials deem
critical to preventing further outbreaks.
Azar put the onus on local governments to handle reopening plans, as
cooped-up Americans begin to flock to bars, beaches and parks.
"These are very localized determinations. There should not be a one
size fits all to reopening but reopen we must because it's not
health versus the economy. It's health versus healthy," he said,
adding there were serious health consequences to not reopening.
Asked about images being broadcast from some areas of the country
showing people gathering near bars and congregating close together,
Azar said that was the cost of freedom.
"I think in any individual instance you're going to see people doing
things that are irresponsible. That's part of the freedom that we
have here in America," he said on CNN.
(Reporting by Doina Chiacu; Editing by Lisa Shumaker and Daniel
Wallis)
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