Respected Medical Journal Calls For Americans To Replace Trump

Welcome

WASHINGTON, DC - MARCH 22: Dr. Robert Redfield, Director of the Center for Disease Control and Prevention speaks at the daily coronavirus briefing joined by U.S. President Donald Trump, U.S. Vice President Mike Pence (L), FEMA Administrator Peter Gaynor, Surgeon General Jerome Adams and Peter Navarro, Director of the National Trade Council in the James Brady Press Briefing Room at the White House on March 22, 2020 in Washington, DC. During the briefing President Trump announced that the National Guard will be deployed to New York, Washington State and California. Congress continues to work on legislation this weekend for a trillion dollar aid package to fight the coronavirus (COVID-19) pandemic. (Photo by Tasos Katopodis/Getty Images)

One of the oldest and best known medical journals wrote a rare and scathing assessment of the Trump administration and its role in making the Centers for Disease Control (CDC) “ineffective.” The Lancet published an editorial saying:

The Administration is obsessed with magic bullets—vaccines, new medicines, or a hope that the virus will simply disappear. But only a steadfast reliance on basic public health principles, like test, trace, and isolate, will see the emergency brought to an end, and this requires an effective national public health agency. The CDC needs a director who can provide leadership without the threat of being silenced and who has the technical capacity to lead today’s complicated effort.

It goes on to say that Donald Trump needs to be voted out of office.

The Trump administration’s further erosion of the CDC will harm global cooperation in science and public health, as it is trying to do by defunding WHO. A strong CDC is needed to respond to public health threats, both domestic and international, and to help prevent the next inevitable pandemic. Americans must put a president in the White House come January, 2021, who will understand that public health should not be guided by partisan politics.

Read the full editorial here.