Morning Briefing
Summaries of health policy coverage from major news organizations
White House's Pandemic Messaging Hits Resistance
A small town in the Berkshire Mountains of Massachusetts has come out against a declaration made in its name by economists and scientists who advocate for a so-called 鈥渉erd immunity鈥 strategy to get through the coronavirus pandemic. The Great Barrington Declaration, released last week, urges against lockdowns and economic restrictions governments have used to wrestle the virus under control. (Wilson, 10/15)
President Trump and his advisers have taken a more hands-on role than previously known in shaping Covid-19 recommendations from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, helping create a crisis of confidence in the nation鈥檚 top public-health agency. The changes the White House has sought鈥攊n many cases successfully鈥攇o beyond the agency鈥檚 public messaging. White House advisers have made line-by-line edits to official health guidance, altering language written by CDC scientists on church choirs, social distancing in bars and restaurants as well as internal summaries of public-health reports, according to interviews with current and former agency and administration officials and their emails. (Ballhaus, Armour and McKay, 10/15)
KHN and Politifact: No, The WHO Didn鈥檛 Change Its Lockdown Stance Or 鈥楢dmit鈥 Trump Was Right聽
On Monday, President Donald Trump claimed that the World Health Organization (WHO) 鈥渁dmitted鈥 he was correct that using lockdowns to control the spread of COVID-19 was more damaging than the illness. In a post on Twitter, Trump wrote: 鈥淭he World Health Organization just admitted that I was right. Lockdowns are killing countries all over the world. The cure cannot be worse than the problem itself. Open up your states, Democrat governors. Open up New York. A long battle, but they finally did the right thing!鈥 (Knight, 10/15)
In related news 鈥
Former New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie said Thursday he spent seven days in an intensive care unit before recovering from Covid-19 in a new statement that details the severity of his case and urges people to take the pandemic seriously. "Having had this virus, I can also assure those who have not had it of a few things. It is something to take very seriously," Christie said. (LeBlanc, 10/15)
President Trump聽said Thursday that he is not tested every day for COVID-19 despite assurances from aides that he is regularly tested for the disease as questions persist about when he first contracted the coronavirus. "I鈥檓 tested, not every day, but I鈥檓 tested a lot," said Trump, who聽administration doctors have confirmed is no longer contagious after聽testing positive for聽COVID-19 earlier this month. (Samuels, 10/15)