Category: Covid-19

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Latest on COVID-19 in MN: 11th straight day with 1,000+ cases – Minnesota Public Radio News

October 18, 2020

Minnesota reported 1,732 more confirmed COVID-19 cases on Sunday the 11th consecutive day that the state has seen new case counts of more than 1,000.

State health officials also reported 17 more COVID-19 deaths, the fourth time in five days that the daily death toll has been in the double digits.

Sundays case count was a slight increase over Saturdays report as testing also increased. The seven-day average test positivity rate ticked up slightly, to 5.7 percent above the 5 percent figure thats a key threshold in policy decisions by state leaders.

Cases have been increasing in all parts of the state in recent weeks.

"Things that we maybe did a month ago, when there was much, much less community spread and number of cases, are riskier today," Health Commissioner Jan Malcolm told reporters on Friday. "And heading into the fall when we're going more indoors it's just going to be all the more important that we really pay attention to those gathering limits and social distancing and masking."

The 17 deaths reported Sunday included 14 residents of long-term care facilities. New COVID-19 hospitalizations in Minnesota continue to trend upward to the highest levels seen since late May.

Here are Minnesotas current COVID-19 statistics:

2,234 deaths (17 new)

122,812 positive cases (1,732 new), 108,316 off isolation

2,509,734 tests, 1,681,318 people tested

5.7 percent seven-day positive test rate

With COVID-19 case counts skyrocketing and deaths climbing, state public health leaders struck a decidedly somber tone this past week, pleading with Minnesotans to shoulder more personal responsibility to stem the spread of the disease.

Clearly frustrated by repeating the same advice for months, officials again implored people to wear masks in indoor public spaces, social distance and take other measures to stem the spread even when gathering with family and friends.

Officials ticked off a range of concerns about the current state of the pandemic, including uncontrolled spread in communities across Minnesota and the rising numbers of health care workers contracting the disease outside of their workplaces, workers that then become sidelined and temporarily unable to provide care for others.

New COVID-19 related deaths reported in Minnesota each day.

Active, confirmed cases last week topped 10,000 and then rose again Sunday to more than 12,200 another record in the pandemic.

Officials had anticipated seeing an October surge in cases expected from Labor Day weekend gatherings, sporting events, college student meetups and other informal affairs at the start of fall semester.

They also expected the wave would put more people in the hospital. That appears to be happening.

While the spike early in the pandemic was driven largely by illnesses tied to long-term care facilities and workplace sites such as meatpacking plants, officials say the current spread is diffused, making it even harder to trace and isolate cases.

Daily new case confirmation numbers have ebbed and flowed over the past seven months. However, the lows are getting higher and the highs are getting higher, Ehresmann told reporters last week, describing it as an escalating roller coaster.

The positive test rate trend remains above 5 percent, the threshold where officials become concerned.

State officials recently unveiled plans to massively expand COVID-19 testing opportunities across Minnesota as active caseloads remain at record highs and hospitalizations continue to climb.

Collectively, Minnesota will soon be able to process 60,000 tests per day, officials said, about twice what its managed on its best days until Friday, when the Health Department reported 44,500 tests completed.

The biggest thing we can do to ensure our kids have an opportunity to be in school, that our businesses and restaurants remain open, is to simply follow the science around masking, around social distancing, getting tested, Gov. Tim Walz told reporters Tuesday. To not do these things will guarantee that others get it.

New cases are up dramatically over the past month in all age groups. That includes a concerning rise in the number of new cases among Minnesotans ages 60 and older. Its not clear whats behind those increases.

People in their 20s still make up the age bracket with the states largest number of confirmed cases more than 27,700 since the pandemic began, including more than 15,800 among people ages 20-24.

The numbers help explain why experts remain particularly concerned about young adults as spreaders of the virus.

While less likely to feel the worst effects of the disease and end up hospitalized, experts worry youth and young adults will spread it to grandparents and other vulnerable populations and that spread could hamper attempts to reopen campuses completely to in-person teaching.

The number of high school-age children confirmed with the disease has also grown, with more than 11,200 total cases among children ages 15 to 19 since the pandemic began.

Regionally, central, northern and southern Minnesota have driven much of the recent increase in new cases while Hennepin and Ramsey counties show some of the slowest case growth in the state.

Central Minnesota cases are leaping relative to its population. Its not clear why. Northern Minnesota, once by far the region least affected by the disease, has also seen its caseload grow dramatically in recent weeks.

Collectively, rural areas of Minnesota continue to report the most new COVID-19 cases.

Early on, many Minnesotans thought COVID-19 would be only a Twin Cities metro area problem, but now the biggest problems are happening outside the suburban and urban parts of the state.

The hottest of our hot spots are outside the metro area, Ehresmann said last week.

The six Minnesota counties with the fastest per-capita growth in COVID-19 cases

David H. Montgomery | MPR News

In Minnesota and across the country, COVID-19 has hit communities of color disproportionately hard in both cases and deaths.

Minnesotans of Hispanic descent are testing positive for COVID-19 at about five times the rate of white Minnesotans. They, along with Black Minnesotans, are also being hospitalized and moved to intensive care units at higher rates than the overall population.

Similar trends hold true for Minnesotas Indigenous and Asian residents. Counts among Indigenous people have jumped in the last week.

Fridays numbers also show newly confirmed cases continuing to accelerate among Latino people in Minnesota.

Distrust of the government, together with deeply rooted health and economic disparities, have hampered efforts to boost testing among communities of color, particularly for undocumented immigrants who fear their personal information may be used to deport them.

Minnesota health officials on Monday put out new guidance to ease visiting rules for nursing homes and other long-term care facilities in the state.

Visitors must now be allowed if the long-term care facility has not had a COVID-19 exposure in the last 14 days. Another requirement for opening nursing homes is if there's low to medium virus transmission in the county.

There are exceptions if there is a reasonable or clinical safety cause not to open, such as staffing issues.

The new rules go into effect Saturday. They are being introduced to align with new federal recommendations. Visitors still must schedule their time with the facilities, be screened for symptoms and wear masks.

Long-term care settings have long been a deep concern for the states public health authorities. Among the 2,180 whove died from COVID-19 related complications in Minnesota, about 71 percent had been living in long-term care or assisted living facilities; nearly all had underlying health problems.

Officials had placed severe visiting restrictions early on in the pandemic, hoping to stem the spread of the disease. Theyve also acknowledged the psychological toll that takes on residents and their families.

Peter Cox | MPR News

The Health Department on Wednesday also unveiled new changes to the way it reports data on cases and deaths. Health authorities have begun reporting the results of antigen tests, a more rapid form of COVID-19 test, along with the results from the more traditional COVID-19 test known by its initials PCR.

The agency said it made the move so its reporting would align with federal guidance. Antigen testing had been relatively small prior to this, so the change to previous case counts wont be dramatic.

The state, though, is nowadding to the COVID-19 death toll people who died after having had COVID-19 confirmed by an antigen (rapid) test but not a PCR test. That added six people to the states death toll Wednesday on top of 23 newly reported deaths.

Even without the statistical tweak, it was still the highest number of daily deaths reported since mid-June. The jump follows similar spikes Wisconsin, which reported 34 deaths in its Tuesday report. North Dakota set a new record for daily deaths last week at 24.

MPR News Staff

Minnesota jobless rate falls to 6 percent, but fewer seeking jobs: Minnesota's seasonally adjusted unemployment rate dropped sharply last month to 6 percent, down from 7.4 percent in August, but that decrease was due mostly to a significant dip in the number of people seeking work, state officials said.

Amid pandemic, Minnesota snowbirds wonder whether to stay put or go south: The pandemic is forcing some snowbirds to reevaluate their winter plans. One Minnesota couple is gearing up for their first winter in the state in 10 years.

National Guard tapped to fill staffing gap at Austin care facility: Staffing problems at Austins Sacred Heart Care Center started near the end of August, with the problem getting worse and worse over the course of several weeks until the facility needed help having enough care workers.

Judge blocks Wisconsin governor's indoor capacity limits amid spike in COVID-19 cases: The rules issued last week limited indoor public gatherings to no more than 25 percent of total occupancy limits. The state's Tavern League argued the caps would effectively put its members out of business.

Data in these graphs are based on the Minnesota Department of Health's cumulative totals released at 11 a.m. daily. You can find more detailed statistics on COVID-19 at theHealth Department website.

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Latest on COVID-19 in MN: 11th straight day with 1,000+ cases - Minnesota Public Radio News

Impact of COVID-19 on people’s livelihoods, their health and our food systems – World Health Organization

October 18, 2020

The COVID-19 pandemic has led to a dramatic loss of human life worldwide and presents an unprecedented challenge to public health, food systems and the world of work. The economic and social disruption caused by the pandemic is devastating: tens of millions of people are at risk of falling into extreme poverty, while the number of undernourished people, currently estimated at nearly 690 million, could increase by up to 132 million by the end of the year.

Millions of enterprises face an existential threat. Nearly half of the worlds 3.3 billion global workforce are at risk of losing their livelihoods. Informal economy workers are particularly vulnerable because the majority lack social protection and access to quality health care and have lost access to productive assets. Without the means to earn an income during lockdowns, many are unable to feed themselves and their families. For most, no income means no food, or, at best, less food and less nutritious food.

The pandemic has been affecting the entire food system and has laid bare its fragility. Border closures, trade restrictions and confinement measures have been preventing farmers from accessing markets, including for buying inputs and selling their produce, and agricultural workers from harvesting crops, thus disrupting domestic and international food supply chains and reducing access to healthy, safe and diverse diets. The pandemic has decimated jobs and placed millions of livelihoods at risk. As breadwinners lose jobs, fall ill and die, the food security and nutrition of millions of women and men are under threat, with those in low-income countries, particularly the most marginalized populations, which include small-scale farmers and indigenous peoples, being hardest hit.

Millions of agricultural workers waged and self-employed while feeding the world, regularly face high levels of working poverty, malnutrition and poor health, and suffer from a lack of safety and labour protection as well as other types of abuse. With low and irregular incomes and a lack of social support, many of them are spurred to continue working, often in unsafe conditions, thus exposing themselves and their families to additional risks. Further, when experiencing income losses, they may resort to negative coping strategies, such as distress sale of assets, predatory loans or child labour. Migrant agricultural workers are particularly vulnerable, because they face risks in their transport, working and living conditions and struggle to access support measures put in place by governments. Guaranteeing the safety and health of all agri-food workers from primary producers to those involved in food processing, transport and retail, including street food vendors as well as better incomes and protection, will be critical to saving lives and protecting public health, peoples livelihoods and food security.

In the COVID-19 crisis food security, public health, and employment and labour issues, in particular workers health and safety, converge. Adhering to workplace safety and health practices and ensuring access to decent work and the protection of labour rights in all industries will be crucial in addressing the human dimension of the crisis. Immediate and purposeful action to save lives and livelihoods should include extending social protection towards universal health coverage and income support for those most affected. These include workers in the informal economy and in poorly protected and low-paid jobs, including youth, older workers, and migrants. Particular attention must be paid to the situation of women, who are over-represented in low-paid jobs and care roles. Different forms of support are key, including cash transfers, child allowances and healthy school meals, shelter and food relief initiatives, support for employment retention and recovery, and financial relief for businesses, including micro, small and medium-sized enterprises. In designing and implementing such measures it is essential that governments work closely with employers and workers.

Countries dealing with existing humanitarian crises or emergencies are particularly exposed to the effects of COVID-19. Responding swiftly to the pandemic, while ensuring that humanitarian and recovery assistance reaches those most in need, is critical.

Now is the time for global solidarity and support, especially with the most vulnerable in our societies, particularly in the emerging and developing world. Only together can we overcome the intertwined health and social and economic impacts of the pandemic and prevent its escalation into a protracted humanitarian and food security catastrophe, with the potential loss of already achieved development gains.

We must recognize this opportunity to build back better, as noted in the Policy Brief issued by the United Nations Secretary-General. We are committed to pooling our expertise and experience to support countries in their crisis response measures and efforts to achieve the Sustainable Development Goals. We need to develop long-term sustainable strategies to address the challenges facing the health and agri-food sectors. Priority should be given to addressing underlying food security and malnutrition challenges, tackling rural poverty, in particular through more and better jobs in the rural economy, extending social protection to all, facilitating safe migration pathways and promoting the formalization of the informal economy.

We must rethink the future of our environment and tackle climate change and environmental degradation with ambition and urgency. Only then can we protect the health, livelihoods, food security and nutrition of all people, and ensure that our new normal is a better one.

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Impact of COVID-19 on people's livelihoods, their health and our food systems - World Health Organization

National Governors Association Submits List of Questions to Trump Administration on Effective Implementation of COVID-19 Vaccine – ny.gov

October 18, 2020

National Governors Association Submits List of Questions to Trump Administration on Effective Implementation of COVID-19 Vaccine | Governor Andrew M. Cuomo Skip to main content October 18, 2020

Albany, NY

Questions on Funding, Allocation, Supply Chain, Communication and Information Requirements

Federal/State Cooperation Crucial to Safely and Effectively Distribute Covid-19 Vaccine

Questions Were Submitted from Republican and Democratic Governors From Around the Country

The National Governors Association, Chaired by Governor Andrew M. Cuomo, today sent a list of questions to the Trump Administration seeking clarity on how to most effectively distribute and administer a COVID-19 vaccine. The distribution and implementation of the vaccine is a massive undertaking that cannot be managed without significant logistical coordination, planning and financial assistance between states and the federal government. The list of questions -- whichwere submitted from Republican and Democratic governors from around the country --covers funding for the administration of a vaccine, allocation and supply chain, and communication and information requirements.

"The National Governors Association, which I chair, sent a letter to the president of the United States last week. We asked to meet with the president to discuss how this is supposed to work between the federal government and the states,"Governor Cuomo said."We are now releasing a compilation of questions from governors all across the country, Democratic and Republican, saying to the White House: how is this going to work? We need to answer these questions before the vaccine is available so that we are ready to go and no one is caught flat-footed when the time comes to vaccinate people."

The list of questions NGA gathered from the nation's governors is available below:

Funding for Vaccine Administration

Allocation and Supply Chain

Communication and Information Requirements

The State of New York does not imply approval of the listed destinations, warrant the accuracy of any information set out in those destinations, or endorse any opinions expressed therein. External web sites operate at the direction of their respective owners who should be contacted directly with questions regarding the content of these sites.

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National Governors Association Submits List of Questions to Trump Administration on Effective Implementation of COVID-19 Vaccine - ny.gov

Halloween and COVID-19: Best activities, safety ranked – Grand Forks Herald

October 18, 2020

SIOUX FALLS, S.D. The COVID-19 pandemic has disrupted many of our social lives and upended our usual schedule of life events, including major changes to how we celebrate holidays.

But shouldn't Halloween, which by long tradition involves people wearing masks, be an easy one to navigate in the time of COVID-19? Not so much. In fact, Halloween comes with a unique set of challenges if you want to keep you and your family, friends and neighbors safe.

The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention recently released a set of guidelines for Halloween safety, ones echoed by state health departments, including the Minnesota Department of Health, which helpfully ranked activities according to risk.

The easiest set of general guidelines should be familiar ones:

Here are somes Halloween-specific things to do, some things to avoid, and a list of activities ranked by potential risk of catching or spreading COVID-19:

A good rule to follow even without COVID -- only pass out and accept wrapped candy. Pixabay

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Halloween and COVID-19: Best activities, safety ranked - Grand Forks Herald

Baltimore Ravens place Brandon Williams on reserve/COVID-19 list – ESPN

October 18, 2020

OWINGS MILLS, Md. -- Baltimore Ravens starting nose tackle Brandon Williams was placed on the reserve/COVID-19 list on Saturday.

Williams was placed on the list after coming in close contact with someone who has COVID-19, a source confirmed to ESPN. He did not test positive, the source said. Per NFL/NFLPA protocol, Williams must isolate for five days after the initial exposure.

The Ravens, who made the trip to Philadelphia on Saturday afternoon, are now expected to be without two starting defensive linemen for Sunday's game against the Eagles. Defensive end Derek Wolfe (neck/concussion) is listed as doubtful.

2 Related

Williams has been a key figure in the Ravens' run defense. With him in the lineup since 2017 (47 games), Baltimore has held teams to 87.2 yards rushing per game and 3.9 yards per carry. In six games without Williams over that span, the Ravens have given up 160.3 yards rushing per game and 4.6 yards per carry.

Williams did not practice Thursday and Friday for non-injury related reasons. After Friday's practice, coach John Harbaugh said Williams had "a personal excused absence."

On Thursday and Friday, Ravens players were spotted wearing masks while walking out to the practice field, which is not something they previously did.

When asked a little over two weeks ago about what it will take to avoid COVID-19, Williams said: "Do as much as you possibly can to protect you and the family and the people that you love. Sometimes if you catch it, you catch it. Sometimes, it just is what it is and it's inevitable."

Justin Ellis is expected to replace Williams and make his first start since 2018. Jihad Ward or Justin Madubuike could fill in for Wolfe.

Williams becomes only the second Ravens player to be put on the reserve/COVID-19 list and the first since training camp officially started.

The Ravens' defense currently leads the NFL in fewest points allowed, giving up 15.2 points per game.

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Baltimore Ravens place Brandon Williams on reserve/COVID-19 list - ESPN

White House Touts Document Calling for Herd-Immunity Approach to Covid-19 Crisis – The Wall Street Journal

October 18, 2020

A group of scientists is pushing back on renewed calls for a herd-immunity approach to Covid-19, calling the method of managing viral outbreaks dangerous and unsupported by scientific evidence.

Eighty doctors and public-health and medical researchers called the herd-immunity approach a dangerous fallacy in a letter published Wednesday in the Lancet. The researchers noted that it is still unknown how long recovered patients might be immune from the virus. Since the letter was published, more than 2,000 others have signed...

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White House Touts Document Calling for Herd-Immunity Approach to Covid-19 Crisis - The Wall Street Journal

Albany Med Nurses speak-out with new COVID-19 resurgence plan – NEWS10 ABC

October 18, 2020

ALBANY, N.Y (NEWS10) Albany Medical Center Nurses sounded the alarm about PPE and protocol problems at the hospital on Sunday. They outlined steps that the hospital should take to protect the communitys help.

Albany Med Nurses, community supporters, including Reverend Peter Cook, New York State Council of Churches, United Church of Christ, Dr. Brenda Robinson, Black Nurses Coalition and the Capital District Labor Federation gathered in front of the hospital highlighting the continued lack of preparation and safety protocols at Albany Med.

Nurses say after 7 months they are speaking out about PPE being reused and the need for greater transparency from Albany Med leadership.

Dr. Brenda Robison says the time is now to make these changes for the nurses.

Albany Med has an obligation to keep patients and our nurses safe by providing PPE. When nurses and other staff come to work to care for their patients it should not be a game of hide the medical masks. I want to stress that disposal means disposal, and single use means single use, said she.

On Sunday, they released a 5-step COVID Resurgence Plan to ensure the safety and health of staff, patients and the community.

The plan includes environmental controls that will save lives. Nurses want all postiive COVID-19 patients to bee in separate units and all patients must be tested upon entering the facility.

The nurses want to take steps to COVID from spreading outside the hospitals doors. They are demanding the need for the highest PPE standards in the US. Nurses say their staffing rations and levels must be restored now. They are asking for complete transparency and collaboration with the Albany Med leadership.

Albany Med Leadership sent this statement to News10 regarding Sundays speak-out.

The health and safety of our patients, students and staff remain Albany Meds top priorities. We continue adhering to guidance from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention regarding all safety measures, and we do so in close collaboration with our colleagues. We are prepared to care for all members of our community regardless of their needs, as we have been since the start of the pandemic, as we have done for 181 years.

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Albany Med Nurses speak-out with new COVID-19 resurgence plan - NEWS10 ABC

Words cannot describe: Family loses 3 of 5 members to COVID-19 within days – WSAV-TV

October 18, 2020

by: Kimberly Cheng and Sareen Habeshian and Nexstar Media Wire

RIVERSIDE COUNTY, Calif. (KTLA) A family of five from California lost three family members to COVID-19 within 10 days of one another.

John Albert Carrillo and his brother, Xavier Carrillo, laid their mother, father and sister to rest this week.

I lost three not just one, but three family members, John Carrillo said.

Johns father, 93-year-old John Carrillo Sr., died on Sept. 15; his sister, 65-year-old Letecia Chavez, on Sept. 23; and his mother, 90-year-old Sally Carrillo, on Sept. 24.

Xavier Carrillo was the first to catch the virus back in August and believes he got it from friends at work. It quickly spread to his family.

While Xavier recovered, members of his family were hospitalized and within weeks, they passed away.

John Carrillo says he wants people to remember his family by the lives they lived and not just as statistics.

The brothers say their father was an army veteran, the first Mexican American drafted out of Riverside to the Korean War. They described their mother as a generous woman who loved to cook. And their sister, who was a mother and a grandmother, worked for Riverside City College until retirement.

Words cannot describe my sister, John Carrillo said. Our leader, our backbone.

John Carrillo had bid farewell to his mother over the phone but was able to say goodbye to his dad in person.

I started crying and I told him, If you want to leave dad, its okay. Were all fine, he said in tears. That was it.

More than 218,000 Americans have died from the novel coronavirus since the beginning of the pandemic. On Friday, the U.S. surpassed 8 million confirmed cases.

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Words cannot describe: Family loses 3 of 5 members to COVID-19 within days - WSAV-TV

The inside story of how Trump’s COVID-19 coordinator undermined the world’s top health agency – Science Magazine

October 16, 2020

Stephan Schmitz (Folio Art)

By Charles PillerOct. 14, 2020 , 6:15 PM

Sciences COVID-19 reporting is supported by the Pulitzer Center and the Heising-Simons Foundation.

This story was also supported by the Science Fund for Investigative Reporting. Please help Science pursue ambitious journalism projects.

On the morning of 13July, more than 20 COVID-19 experts from across the U.S. government assembled in a conference room at the Department of Health and Human Services, steps from the Capitol. The group conferred on how best to gather key data on available beds and supplies of medicine and protective gear from thousands of hospitals. Around the table, masks concealed their expressions, but with COVID-19 cases surging out of control in some parts of the country, their grave mood was unmistakable, say two people who were in the room.

Irum Zaidi, a top aide to White House Coronavirus Task Force Coordinator Deborah Birx, chaired the meeting. Zaidi lifted her mask slightly to be heard and delivered a fait accompli: Birx, who was not present, had pulled the plug on the Centers for Disease Control and Preventions (CDCs) system for collecting hospital data and turned much of the responsibility over to a private contractor, Pittsburgh-based TeleTracking Technologies Inc., a hospital data management company. The reason: CDC had not met Birxs demand that hospitals report 100% of their COVID-19 data every day.

According to two officials in the meeting, one CDC staffer left and immediately began to sob, saying, I refuse to do this. I cannot work with people like this. It is so toxic. That person soon resigned from the pandemic data team, sources say.

Other CDC staffers considered the decision arbitrary and destructive. Anyone who knows the data supply chain in the U.S. knows [getting all the data daily] is impossible during a pandemic, says one high-level expert at CDC. And they considered Birxs imperative unnecessary because staffers with decades of experience could confidently estimate missing numbers from partial data.

Why are they not listening to us? a CDC official at the meeting recalls thinking. Several CDC staffers predicted the new data system would fail, with ominous implications. Birx has been on a monthslong rampage against our data, one texted to a colleague shortly afterward. Good f---ing luck getting the hospitals to clean up their data and update daily.

When Birx, a physician with a background in HIV/AIDS research, was named coordinator of the task force in February, she was widely praised as a tough, indefatigable manager and a voice of data-driven reason. But some of her actions have undermined the effectiveness of the worlds preeminent public health agency, according to a Science investigation. Interviews with nine current CDC employees, several of them senior agency leaders, and 20 former agency leaders and public health expertsas well as a review of more than 100 official emails, memos, and other documentssuggest Birxs hospital data takeover fits a pattern in which she opposed CDC guidance, sometimes promoting President Donald Trumps policies or views against scientific consensus.

As coordinator of the White House Coronavirus Task Force, Deborah Birx, shown at a March news conference, has played a central role in the Trump administrations response to the pandemic.

The agencys loss of control over hospital data is emblematic of its decline in nine short months. Since the pandemic began, CDC has foundered (see sidebar, below). It has committed unforced errors, such as shipping out faulty coronavirus tests, and has been squelched or ignored amid continual political interference.

CDC employees with whomSciencespokewho requested anonymity because they fear retaliationalong with other public health leaders, say Birxs actions, abetted by a chaotic White House command structure and weak leadership from CDC Director Robert Redfield, have contributed to what amounts to an existential crisis for the agency. And her disrespect for CDC has sent morale plummeting, senior officials say. During a May task force meeting,The Washington Postreported, Birx said: There is nothing from the CDC that I can trust.

CDC scientists and others say Birxs record echoes her approach as head of the Presidents Emergency Plan for AIDS Relief (PEPFAR) since 2014. Although that program is widely praised, people who worked on it for years say her draconian management and unrealistic data demands damaged morale and disrupted fieldwork and patient services.

Through the office of Vice President Mike Pence, who heads the task force, Birx declined to be interviewed or to respond to written questions, including whether the White House pressured her to use TeleTrackings system. (TeleTrackings majority owner, real estate developer Michael Zamagias, has donated to Republican candidates and has ties to Trump businesses through colleagues, according to an NPR report.)

Redfield also declined to be interviewed or to respond to written questions. In a statement, he said: I will do everything in my power to support [CDC scientists] as I maintain my commitment to lead this agency grounded in data, science, and public service.

Birxs admirers, including Emory University epidemiologist Carlos del Rio, credit her with sometimes pushing back against antiscientific White House policies.And Anthony Fauci, respected head of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseasesand fellow task force member, has consistently praised Birx as someone who picks her battles to exert positive influence in the long run. He has suggested her recent trips to advise state health leaders have helped reduce COVID-19 cases.

Birx is in a horribly difficult position, saysNancy Cox, former director of CDCs influenza division and now an affiliated retiree of the agency. She wants to stay in the good graces of the president and the rest of the administration while trying to do the right thing with respect to public health. Do I view her as a good scientist who gets things done? Yes.

But Birxs lack of background in respiratory disease outbreaks has left her with blind spots, as has her management style, Cox says. Do I view her as someone who is willing to railroad people into doing what she has decided is the right thing to do? Yes. Does she listen real well? Not necessarily. One result was the debacle with the hospital data.

The interviews and documents obtained byScienceshow Birx replaced a functional, if imperfect, CDC data systemwell understood by hospitals and state health departmentswith an error-ridden and unreliable filter on hospital needs that sometimes displays nonsensical data, such as negative numbers of beds. Such problems could hamper effective distribution of federal resources during an anticipated fall and winter spike in COVID-19 and flu cases, CDC officials say.

This is the surreal part of it: They are attempting to replicate something we built over 15years. And they are failing, says a high-level CDC official with personal knowledge of the system. Either Birx isnt looking at the data, or shes looking awaybecause its an absolute disaster.

When Trump installed Birx to coordinate the task force on 27February, she was widely regarded as a strong choice, even by the presidents critics. Public health scientists hoped her data driven discipline, political adroitness, long-standing ties to Redfield, and military bearingshe spent 28years in the Armycould insulate the pandemic response and CDC against some of Trumps damaging impulses. Her new role gave her the ability to exert substantial authority over CDC (see organizational chart, below).

At that point, the agency was already struggling. Among other mistakes, CDC had botched the rollout of its initial COVID-19 tests in early February. And the Trump administration had attacked or muzzled agency leaders for speaking basic truths and repeatedly forced CDC to soften its scientific advice.

Birx appeared to have the experience to bolster the agency. She had worked as a fellow in cellular immunology under Fauci and later became lab deputy to Redfield at the Walter Reed Army Institute of Research (WRAIR), where he directed AIDS vaccine research. The pair co-authored numerous scientific papers during the late 1980s and early 90s. When Redfield was investigated for possible misconduct after presenting overly rosy data on a vaccine therapy approach to AIDS treatment at a 1992 Amsterdam conference, Birx defended him to Army investigators. (The investigation found errors but cleared Redfield of misconduct charges.)

A working organization chart obtained by Science shows Deborah Birxs central roles in the federal COVID-19 response. She coordinates the White House Coronavirus Task Force (WHCTF) and co-chairs two of its three divisions: the unified coordination group, which manages the response from the Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) and the Department of Defense (DOD); and Operation Warp Speed, which develops vaccines in cooperation with several agencies. Domestic manufacturing coordinates production of personal protective gear and other needs. The physician advisory group has only an advisory role. Listed individuals co-chair the groups. (This chart was issued on 31 July.)

V. Altounian/Science

Soon after, Redfield retired from the military to co-found the Institute of Human Virology at the University of Maryland. Birx assumed his job at WRAIR, then rose to direct the U.S. Military HIV Research Program. She next moved to CDC, directing its global AIDS project for 9years. In 2014, then-President Barack Obama appointed her as global AIDS ambassador and head of the Department of States PEPFAR. That project has been seen by many people as an exemplary foreign aid program. It is credited with saving millions of lives in the developing world since its founding in 2003 and sharply lowering HIV infection rates among girls and young women, among other achievements.

Birx set out to strengthen PEPFAR data systems and move funds to where they could save the most lives, those familiar with the program say. PEPFAR had a mandate of doing more with the same budget, says del Rio, who chairs PEPFARs Scientific Advisory Board. Birx succeeded by squeezing out inefficiencies, and being very data driven, and by cutting drug costs, he says.

Sten Vermund, dean of the Yale School of Public Health, led PEPFAR programs in Africa under Birx and her predecessor, Eric Goosby. Vermund praises Birxs industry and science and notes that his Mozambique program got more funding under her leadership. Birx also deftly shepherded PEPFAR into the Trump era with no budget cuts, and her plan to refocus PEPFAR made sense, says Amanda Glassman, executive vice president of the Center for Global Development, a Washington, D.C. and London-based research group.

But Glassman and Vermund also agree that Birx made constant, burdensome, urgent demands for data on HIV/AIDS cases, treatments, and other factors. Vermund says those demands sometimes disrupted services for patients. He describes some of Birxs data demands as almost whimsical and their purposes opaque, calling her leadership style authoritarian.

That description is backed by a blistering audit of PEPFARs work in four African countries, issued in February by the Department of States inspector general (IG). Most of the PEPFAR staff auditors interviewed in 2019 said their input was ignored and that program heads, led by Birx, set unachievable benchmarks.

One PEPFAR staffer told auditors that a target for the number of people on antiretroviral therapy in one country was actually greater than the number of people living with HIV. Some staff described PEPFAR management as autocratic or dictatorial. One said high-level technical staff adopted an approach of just obey and move on. Working in fear and a space where nothing is negotiable.

Programs that missed data quotas could have their funding cut off, a situation a third staffer described as a recipe for cooking data. The data targets put a lot of pressure on the [local] partners, a fourth staffer told the IG investigators. Sometimes, you are not even sure that the numbers are true. Especially when you go to the field and look at the [patient] registers. You cannot verify that they are real patients. A CDC PEPFAR manager toldSciencethat Countries need the money, so program staff manipulated performance data.

Vermund says his program never falsified data, but we knew for a fact that others did not necessarily tell the truth, [using] exaggerations to make themselves look better. He says some programs double-counted patients who entered treatment, dropped out, and then returned. Perverse incentives were created based on the data-driven outcomes. Despite the pressure, the audit showed, Birxs data targets were often missed.

Amid the constant distraction of data demands, services to patients sometimes suffered, one staffer told the IG. That problem occurred in many PEPFAR nations, the CDC manager says.

In response to the IG report, Birx promised some reforms and clearer, transparent dialogue. She said local PEPFAR teams would set their own targets, although funding would be adjusted to the presented level of ambition. Before those actions were fully in place, Trump appointed her to coordinate the Coronavirus Task Force.

Del Rio isnt surprised that some PEPFAR staff members were unhappy. Shes a no-bullshit kind of person, he says. Shes not running a Montessori school.

And Glassman notes that many women who attain powerful jobs face extra criticism or get tagged as authoritarian, whereas men with comparable leadership styles are simply accepted. Is [Birx] getting pounded partially because shes a woman? she asks.

But Glassman concedes that despite good intentions, Birxs style was a disaster at PEPFAR. And tying data targets to funding without independent verification does invite misreporting, she says. Her desireto get those resultsand show them to the world, I think, just overcame everything, Glassman says.

Now, some CDC staffers say, Birx is applying the PEPFAR playbook to the new pandemic, and the dismantling of CDCs COVID-19 hospital data system is a consequence.

Agency insiders concede that CDCs National Healthcare Safety Network (NHSN)the system used for 15years to gather crucial data from hospitalswas far from perfect. The network, which collects data from about 37,000 hospitals and other health care facilities, has been underfunded for years. All the same, five times weekly, NHSN reliably produced actionable COVID-19 data such as available hospital beds, intensive care occupancy, and ventilators used, according to CDC sources and internal reports obtained byScience. CDC staffers used long-tested statistical algorithms to impute missing data.

When NHSN was shut down for hospital COVID-19 data in July, more than 100 public health and patient advocacy groups, along with scientific and medical societies (including AAAS, which publishesScience), warned that the switch could degrade crucial data reporting. Attorneys general for 21 states and the District of Columbia echoed their concerns. (The system still collects COVID-19 data from nursing homes and on issues such as on health careassociated infections and resistance to antimicrobial therapies such as remdesivir, which has helped some severely ill COVID-19 patients and was given to Trump.)

But del Rio says Birx viewed NHSN in a similar light as the data system she inherited at PEPFAR in 2014woefully inadequate. Birx was exasperated, del Rio said, that NHSN could not provide daily, comprehensive data, for example on supplies of remdesivir, to guide the governments efforts.

Either Birx isnt looking at the data, or shes looking awaybecause its an absolute disaster.

In a spring meeting, Birx seemed fixated on applying the lessons of HIV/AIDS in a small African nation to COVID-19 in the United States, says a CDC official who was present. Birx was able to get data from every hospital on every case in Malawi, the official says. She couldnt understand why that wasnt happening in the United States with COVID-19. Birx didnt seem to see the difference between a slow-moving HIV outbreak and a raging respiratory pandemic. [CDC Principal Deputy Director] Anne Schuchat had to say, Debbi, this is not HIV. Birx got unhappy with that.

Birx insisted every hospital update 100% of its data every day, including detailed patient demographics. She added new data categories, such as patient age and supplies of remdesivir. CDC officials told her 100% daily compliance was virtually impossible, but said NHSN statisticians could accurately extrapolate from partial data, providing results in near real time, one agency official says.

Another CDC official charged with responding to Birxs demands calls her fixation and fetishization of those daily count numbers deeply frustrating. Birxs top assistants accused CDC employees who pushed back of being callous about COVID-19 deaths. The process assumed the tone of a military command structure, the CDC official says: Obey without question. Echoing PEPFAR employees, the official adds that it seemed designed to make you feel like you are failing every day.

Birx doesnt really understand data, says James Curran, public health dean at Emory University, who led CDCs HIV/AIDS unit for 15years before Birxs time at the agency. I dont think shes asking the right questions. It doesnt mean that the CDC is always right. But you should have a partnership with people.

Instead, say CDC sources with direct knowledge of the events, Birxs team made a take it or leave it demand: Immediately collect case data by age, or NHSN would be replaced.

When the switch to TeleTracking was announced, Redfield applauded it as a way to streamline reporting. He also tweeted that the decision was made at working levels in CDC and didnt rise to his level. Many people in CDC saw his comments as a betrayal.

Birxs imperative of 100% of hospital data every day has proved elusive. The Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) data hub for hospital capacity, including inpatient beds occupied overall and by COVID-19 patients, now draws on data collected by TeleTracking, a for-profit company with nearly 400 employees, and on data submitted by state health departments and hospital associations. As with NHSN, nearly all data are collected manually rather than automatically from electronic patient records. Some hospital associations and health departments combine data from hospitals into spreadsheets and send them by fax or email to HHS. TeleTracking also offers a web interface for hospitals or their contractors to enter data.

The underlying data tables are updated daily but run 3 to 4days behindless efficient than NHSN before it ceased operating. CDC officials and public health experts blame several factors for those problems: Hospitals arent used to TeleTrackings system and the additional data points (such as age) added work. Also, TeleTracking has long-standing relationships with fewer hospitals than NHSN; such relationships can speed troubleshooting.

In a 7October written reply to questions, an HHS spokesperson acknowledged the time lag but called it a good practice to provide the most complete dataset because hospitals might not be able to respond on weekends, for example. But the department plans to reduce that lag, the spokesperson wrote.

At a 6October press briefing, Birx said 98% of hospitals were reporting at least weekly and 86% daily. In its reply toScience, HHS pegged the daily number at 95%. To achieve that, the bar for compliance was set very low, as a single data item during the prior week. A23September CDC report, obtained byScience, shows that as of that date only about 24% of hospitals reported all requested data, including protective equipment supplies in hand. In five states or territories, not a single hospital provided complete data.

HHS said the 23September analysis was filled with inaccuracies, misunderstandings, and errors, without providing details, and questioned its authenticity.

The Centers for Disease Control and Preventions director, Robert Redfield, shown at its headquarters in Atlanta, has been criticized for failing to robustly defend the agency against accusations of political interference.

ButSciencealso obtained a report prepared by CDC data experts for use by the agency and Birxs team dated 19May, back when TeleTracking and NHSN were both offered as options for data submission. NHSN showed 3% to 6% missing data for such items as COVID-19 inpatient bed occupancy and ventilator use. TeleTracking showed 36% to 57% missing data. Those numbers were mostly unchanged, with significant improvement in only one category, in the 23September update, after NHSN was no longer used for hospital reporting.

Like NHSN, the TeleTracking system estimates missing data, but the company and HHS declined to release any details for independent analysis. CDC staffers say TeleTracking has other problems; for example, many hospitals share ID numbers in its system, making it difficult to differentiate between each ones needs. CDC critiques obtained bySciencealso show TeleTracking has consistently reported nonsensical numbers. For example, the system showed negative numbers of occupied hospital beds and more than 15,000 beds for a single California hospital. In nearly 1500 cases, it showed more beds filled than total beds at a hospital.

TeleTracking referred questions to HHS, which said it plans to boost automation to reduce errors. For now, the HHS spokesperson wrote: HHS made a conscious decision to take a different approach on data collection. Rather than reject incorrect data outright, HHS allows it to flow into our system and then attempts to manually fix detected errors. A CDC data expert calls that an admission of faulty data practices.

In a 25September memo from Birx to HHS Secretary Alex Azar, obtained byScience, Birx made a major concession to reality: She gave up on elements of the daily 100% compliance rule that had motivated the switch to TeleTracking. For example, Birx instead asked that inventories of supplies, such as personal protective equipment, be provided weekly because more frequent reporting had proved infeasible.

During the 6October press briefing, Birx said the moves ensure that we are not adding additional burden for hospitals. The key is valid and timely data, she said.

But in that same briefing, Birx and Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services Administrator Seema Verma announced a new and stringent requirement reminiscent of PEPFAR: Funding will be tied to reporting compliance. Hospitals will be disqualified from Medicare and Medicaid reimbursements if they fail to submit required data after being warned of lapses. Thememo from Birx to Azar, marked not releasable to the public,shows Birx pushed for the change.

The move is sledgehammer enforcement that could needlessly divert time and money from patient care, Federation of American Hospitals President and CEO Charles Chip Kahn said in a statement after the announcement.

As at PEPFAR, CDC officials say this requirement could create perverse incentives to supply false data. Medicare funding is a survival issue for hospitals, so many are likely to submit the requested numbers regardless of whether they are accurate, say three high-level CDC officials with personal knowledge of agency data systems.

HHS cited safeguards against such fraud, including assistance from state health departments, and systematic logic and error checking. The departments IG also identifies fraud aggressively, the spokesperson wrote.

However, the potential long-term impact keeps CDC staffers up at night, one says. I worry, is this going to damage the whole process of how public health data are collected down the road?

CDC officials say Birx acquired her outsize influence over the agency in part because of how power was allocated in the federal pandemic response. An organizational chart obtained byScience, marked for official use only, shows Birx coordinates the task force and co-chairs two key bodies: the unified coordination group, which manages the response from HHS and therefore CDC; and Operation Warp Speed, the vaccine development effort. A physician advisory group, comprising Fauci, Redfield, National Institutes of Health Director Francis Collins, and othersis off to the side(see organizational chart, above). Senior CDC people say those advisers have been reduced to window dressing, with little ability to mediate in the deteriorating relationship between Birx and CDC.

She calls into question the science of the agency.

The hospital data system is perhaps the most calamitous flashpoint in that relationship. But CDC officials say that, in other instances, Birx flouted science and undermined the agency to placate the president. For example, she responded with silence to Trumps suggestion that ingesting disinfectants might cure COVID-19. And according to the nonpartisan FactCheck.org, in March she understated the pandemics spread by misleadingly portraying states with few cases as almost 40% of the country, although those states make up only about 7% of the population.

Dr. Birx, what the hell are you doing? What happened to you? Your HIV colleagues are ashamed, tweeted Yale epidemiologist and AIDS expert Gregg Gonsalves in response.

And she pressured CDC to tone down its guidance on school openings, according toThe New York Times; itpublishedan email she wrote asking Redfield to take a more permissive approach.

Several CDC leaders say Birxs distrust and rejection of input from CDC data experts has created enormous animosity. She calls into question the science of the agency, says a current senior CDC official. Were not perfect but in the midst of a crisis, to indicate that one of your chief arms for responding to a very severe pandemic cant be believed has been disastrous.

Birxs supporters say she has done as well as anyone can working for Trump. She can navigate science and politics, del Rio says. I dont think anybody can navigate science and Trump. And Birx has resisted some of the presidents outrageous claims, even persuading Pence to sometimes wear a mask. In August, she described the pandemic to CNN as extraordinarily widespread, losing some favor with Trump.

Even critics within CDC give Birx qualified credit. Her consistent push for testing has gotten crosswise with the White House, says a top CDC official, who adds: At her core, shes a scientist.

But that official and others also see Birx as a cautionary tale of how an ostensibly well-meaning expert can cause great harm by working in the style of the Trump administration. Bullying and threatening is a last resort for our usual way of operating, whereas thats the modus operandi for this administration and the White House task force, the official says. We need people who think like we do. Ive heard that stated in multiple instances by Birxs top assistants, the official adds. Its not scientific.

Many executives and midcareer professionals who represent the future of the agency plan to leave if Trump wins reelection, several sources say. Its another reason that has public health authorities wondering whether CDC has already passed a tipping point, from which it will struggle to recover no matter who is elected.

The implications of a discredited CDC for the COVID-19 pandemic are grave, says Thomas Frieden, who led the agency under Obama. If the public doesnt trust government guidance to take vaccines when available, he says, the pandemic could rage indefinitely. Breaking that trust could cost our economyand American lives.

Senior career executives at another beleaguered agency, the Food and Drug Administration, recently called for preservation of their scientific independence in aUSA Todayeditorial. At CDC, leaders below Redfield are talking privately about whether to take a similar public stand against the destruction of their agency by the Trump administration. One says: The longer we dont speak out, the harder it will be to regain our credibility.

See more here:

The inside story of how Trump's COVID-19 coordinator undermined the world's top health agency - Science Magazine

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