Experts rebuff Trump on likely Covid-19 return

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President Donald Trump has played down the possibility the coronavirus could be worse this winter, despite medical experts warning Covid-19 could combine with the flu to make a more complicated return to the United States.

Mr Trump, who has been pushing for states to begin reopening their economies, batted down notions that Covid-19 could return in large waves, as has happened in previous pandemics.

Health experts and members of the White House coronavirus task force have warned of a possible comeback for the virus next fall.

Virus Outbreak Trump
White House coronavirus response coordinator Dr Deborah Birx could not quite give Donald Trump the assurances he wanted to hear at Wednesday’s coronavirus briefing (Alex Brandon/AP)

He continued: “If it comes back, though, it won’t be coming back in the form that it was. It will be coming back in smaller doses that we can contain.

“You could have some embers of corona … (but) we will not go through what we went through for the last two months.”

Mr Trump then turned to Dr Deborah Birx, coordinator of the coronavirus task force, and asked: “Doctor, wouldn’t you say there’s a good chance that Covid will not come back?”

“We don’t know,” Dr Birx responded.

He stressed that in the fall, the nation would be better prepared to manage it.

“Whether or not it’s going to be big or small is going to depend on our response,” Dr Fauci said.

Mr Trump’s insistence the virus will not pose a grave danger later this year could run the risk of creating a false sense of security when health experts are still urging Americans to take precautions.

Moreover, it could stand as a precarious political prediction when he goes before voters in November.

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President Donald Trump watches as Dr. Robert Redfield, director of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, talks about face coverings at Wednesday’s briefing (Alex Brandon/AP)

Dr Redfield said he wanted to clarify those remarks to The Washington Post, although he confirmed the statement was accurately reported.

“I didn’t say that this was going to be worse,” Dr Redfield said. “I said it was going to be more difficult and potentially complicated.”

He added: “We are building that public healthcare capacity now to make sure that we stay in the containment mode for the upcoming fall and winter season so we will not need to resort to the kind of mitigation that we had to in the spring.”

Mr Trump had been unhappy about Dr Redfield’s remarks, which conflicted with the administration’s optimistic messaging that the country will soon move beyond the virus. The president tweeted earlier in the day that Dr Redfield’s comments had been misconstrued.

Trump has frequently taken an optimistic view regarding the severity of the virus, including declarations last month that COVID-19 would “disappear.” In recent days, he has pushed for the nation to begin restarting its economy.

But his own health experts on Wednesday continued to urge caution. Dr Fauci said states beginning to reopen “should be careful” and that rushing to lift social distancing guidelines would likely accelerate infections.

Mr Trump also said Wednesday that the Pentagon is planning a multicity tour by the US military’s top flight demonstration teams to “champion national unity” amid the coronavirus pandemic. He said the Blue Angels and the Thunderbirds, the demonstration squadrons for the Navy and Air Force, would fly over a number of cities.

Mr Trump also promised a July Fourth celebration for the public on the National Mall.

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