Teachers
say school reopening now threatens their lives – Azar counters with
total lie
Faces of some of the health care workers who died of COVID-19 (Kaiser Health News) |
"There's no
reason we can't do any of this," Azar, a former pharmaceutical lobbyist
and executive, said during an event at the White House.
"We have healthcare settings. We have healthcare workers, they don't get infected because they take appropriate precautions. They engage in social distancing, they wear facial covering, they use good personal hygiene. This can work, you can do all of this. There's no reason schools have to be in any way any different."
"We have healthcare settings. We have healthcare workers, they don't get infected because they take appropriate precautions. They engage in social distancing, they wear facial covering, they use good personal hygiene. This can work, you can do all of this. There's no reason schools have to be in any way any different."
In addition to noting
that Azar's claim about healthcare workers not getting infected is wildly
false—according to the Centers for Disease
Control and Prevention, more than 94,000 healthcare workers have contracted
Covid-19 and at least 500 have died—medical professionals rejected the argument
that precautionary measures taken in healthcare settings can easily be
replicated in the nation's schools.
"We are trained
in infection control and have used [personal protective equipment] for
years," tweeted Prasad Jallepalli, MD, a
professor at the Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center. "This is almost
as dumb as the 'give teachers guns' proposal."
Sarah Karlin-Smith, a
reporter with Pink Sheet, asked: "If we don't have enough PPE for
the healthcare workers on the front lines, how can we possibly have enough PPE
for all of the country's teachers to take the same precautions?"
In response to
widespread criticism of Azar's comments, HHS spokesperson Michael Caputo tweeted that the secretary "is
keenly aware of and grateful for the sacrifices #HealthcareHeroes have been
making throughout this pandemic" and added that it would be
"foolish" to suggest he "doesn't believe these warriors get sick
and die."
Kaiser Health News and The Guardian, in a
collaborative investigation titled "Lost on the Frontline," identified more
than 760 healthcare workers who have likely died of Covid-19 in the U.S.—a
death toll significantly higher than the CDC's official count.
"In some states,
medical personnel account for as many as 20% of known coronavirus cases. They
tend to patients in hospitals, treating them, serving them food, and cleaning
their rooms. Others at risk work in nursing homes or are employed as home
health aides," the outlets reported. "Some cases are shrouded in secrecy...
Many hospitals have been overwhelmed and workers sometimes have lacked
protective equipment or suffer from underlying health conditions that make them
vulnerable to the highly infectious virus."