President Donald Trump’s failure to respond to the coronavirus pandemic didn’t begin with the administration’s inability to send out the millions of test kits and the protective medical gear for health care workers that experts say are needed to tackle the crisis. It didn’t start with Trump’s bungled messaging downplaying the crisis even as it’s worsened, nor with his mid-March insistence that social distancing measures could be lifted by Easter (he later backpedaled).
Read more at: Coronavirus: Trump’s botched response and the lack of testing, explained - Vox
It began in April 2018 — more than a year and a half
before the SARS-CoV-2 virus and the disease it causes, Covid-19,
sickened enough people in China that authorities realized they were
dealing with a new disease.
The Trump administration, with John Bolton newly at the
helm of the White House National Security Council, began dismantling the
team in charge of pandemic response, firing its leadership and disbanding the team in spring 2018.
The cuts, coupled with the administration’s repeated
calls to cut the budget for the Centers for Disease Control and
Prevention (CDC) and other public health agencies, made it clear that
the Trump administration wasn’t prioritizing the federal government’s
ability to respond to disease outbreaks.
That lack of attention to preparedness, experts say,
helps explain why the Trump administration has consistently botched its
response to the coronavirus pandemic.
Read more at: Coronavirus: Trump’s botched response and the lack of testing, explained - Vox
No comments:
Post a Comment