Morning Briefing
Summaries of health policy coverage from major news organizations
'Largest Spreader' Of Disinformation? Title Goes To Trump, Studies Find
Is President Trump the nation鈥檚 chief disinformation officer? Controversial posts concerning COVID-19 on Monday in which the president tells the public "Don鈥檛 let it dominate you" and "Don鈥檛 be afraid of it" and claims he may have immunity to the deadly virus have heightened public criticism of Trump for spreading dangerous falsehoods.聽鈥淭here is no doubt that Donald Trump is the largest spreader of specific and important types of misinformation today,鈥 said Graham Brookie, director of the Atlantic Council's Digital Forensic Research Lab.聽 (Guynn, 10/5)
A super-spreader鈥攁 term we didn鈥檛 much use nine months ago鈥攊s a person with a contagious disease who gives it to a lot of other people. In the coronavirus pandemic, super-spreaders have played an outsize role. Scientists have identified super-spreaders who have infected dozens of people with the virus, while others with the illness haven鈥檛 infected anyone at all. Super-spreaders may explain why the coronavirus seems to take over so quickly in some places, but not in others. We don鈥檛 know yet whether President Donald Trump was a super-spreader of the coronavirus or the victim of one, perhaps at the Rose Garden event for the Supreme Court nominee Amy Coney Barrett, where few wore masks and many shook hands; perhaps while he was preparing to debate. But Trump has been a super-spreader in a different sense for many, many years鈥攁 super-spreader of disinformation. (Applebaum, 10/3)
In related news 鈥
Attitude about illness is looming large over the president's coronavirus treatment. White House physician Sean Connelly said on Sunday that he didn't initially disclose that the president was given oxygen on Friday, despite multiple questions about it from reporters, because he was trying to "reflect the upbeat attitude" of the president. Trump's estranged niece, Mary Trump, says members of the Trump family have viewed illness as "a display of unforgivable weakness." (Silva, 10/4)
President Donald Trump's doctors won鈥檛 say when he last tested negative. They won鈥檛 reveal details of how his lungs are functioning, why he was prescribed advanced treatments usually reserved for severe Covid-19 cases, how high his fever soared or just how low his oxygen levels dipped. As the White House brushes aside questions about just how serious the president鈥檚 bout with the lethal virus really got, America鈥檚 enemies are poised to fill the information void, former and current U.S. national security officials are warning. (Seligman and Bertrand, 10/5)