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sortagreen

03/14/23 7:00 AM

#438988 RE: fuagf #438985

Meanwhile Robert Redfield, rather than slink away in shame, goes up to Capitol Hill and whines about Dr. Fauci not being nice to him.

The motherfucker ought to lose all of his credentials.
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Zorax

03/14/23 11:06 AM

#438997 RE: fuagf #438985

I don't know why the author's contention seem to point to the cdc as the culprit and failure when it's pretty clear the whole cdc was a target of a insane narcissistic sick man with orange face paint. CDC was forced into many things and lessor minions of the CDC were scared into doing things behind top bosses back. This excerpt shows this in so many words. The article almost seems dismissive to the shittypants administration.

At 7:47 a.m. on the Sunday of Memorial Day weekend, Dr. Jay Butler pounded out a grim email to colleagues at the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention in Atlanta.

Butler, then the head of the agency’s coronavirus response, and his team had been trying to craft guidance to help Americans return safely to worship amid worries that two of its greatest comforts — the chanting of prayers and singing of hymns — could launch a deadly virus into the air with each breath.

The week before, the CDC had published its investigation of an outbreak at an Arkansas church that had resulted in four deaths. The agency’s scientific journal recently had detailed a superspreader event in which 52 of the 61 singers at a 2½-hour choir practice developed COVID-19. Two died.

Butler, an infectious disease specialist with more than three decades of experience, seemed the ideal person to lead the effort. Trained as one of the CDC’s elite disease detectives, he’d helped the FBI investigate the anthrax attacks, and he’d led the distribution of vaccines during the H1N1 flu pandemic when demand far outstripped supply.

But days earlier, Butler and his team had suddenly found themselves on President Donald Trump’s front burner when the president began publicly agitating for churches to reopen. That Thursday, Trump had announced that the CDC would release safety guidelines for them “very soon.” He accused Democratic governors of disrespecting churches, and deemed houses of worship “essential services.”

Butler’s team rushed to finalize the guidance for churches, synagogues and mosques that Trump’s aides had shelved in April after battling the CDC over the language. In reviewing a raft of last-minute edits from the White House, Butler’s team rejected those that conflicted with CDC research, including a worrisome suggestion to delete a line that urged congregations to “consider suspending or at least decreasing” the use of choirs.

On Friday, Trump’s aides called the CDC repeatedly about the guidance, according to emails. “Why is it not up?” they demanded until it was posted on the CDC website that afternoon.

The next day, a furious call came from the office of the vice president: The White House suggestions were not optional. The CDC’s failure to use them was insubordinate, according to emails at the time.

Fifteen minutes later, one of Butler’s deputies had the agency’s text replaced with the White House version, the emails show. The danger of singing wasn’t mentioned.

Early that Sunday morning, as Americans across the country prepared excitedly to return to houses of worship, Butler, a churchgoer himself, poured his anguish and anger into an email to a few colleagues.

“I am very troubled on this Sunday morning that there will be people who will get sick and perhaps die because of what we were forced to do,” he wrote.


ProPublica obtained hundreds of emails and other internal government documents and interviewed more than 30 CDC employees, contractors and Trump administration officials who witnessed or were involved in key moments of the crisis. Although news organizations around the world have chronicled the CDC’s stumbles in real time, ProPublica’s reporting affords the most comprehensive inside look at the escalating tensions, paranoia and pained discussions that unfolded behind the walls of CDC’s Atlanta headquarters. And it sheds new light on the botched COVID-19 tests, the unprecedented political interference in public health policy, and the capitulations of some of the world’s top public health leaders.
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Zorax

03/14/23 6:12 PM

#439026 RE: fuagf #438985

Well, shittypansts did indeed cut large amounts of funding to cdc, he also did this in his term...
Removing just about everything around the world cdc.

As funding expanded and contracted in recent years, the CDC had to cut over 300 posts overseas, including both Americans and foreigners. By the time Schuchat noticed the blurb about an outbreak in Wuhan, her agency no longer had an office inside the Chinese Center for Disease Control and Prevention, its counterpart in Beijing. While the U.S. agency once had more than a dozen Americans in China, by January only three remained.

...and this is many claims with no actual basis shown for the statements..the article has many 'cover-ups and sub plots and only mentions health and national security officials, but no names or links.

The lab official tried to contact a chief virologist at the China CDC who was usually helpful, but got no response. Neither did colleagues who reached out to Chinese scientists with whom they had collaborated for years. The Americans concluded that the regime in Beijing was telling them to keep quiet.

Gao had also run up against a cover-up by authorities in Wuhan, health and national security officials said. Gao’s field investigators were “told there was no evidence of human-to-human transmission,” said Dr. Ray Yip, a former country director for the CDC in China. “They didn’t show them all the cases. They had a couple of cases of hospital workers infected by then, and that’s obviously human-to-human, how else did they get it?”
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fuagf

04/05/24 2:35 AM

#469080 RE: fuagf #438985

Avian flu outbreak in US cows tracked by Australian officials

Inside the Fall of the CDC
This article in full is very, very long.
[...]The market’s fall infuriated the president. Trump had privately confessed to author Bob Woodward that he was publicly downplaying the virus to prevent panic. The CDC would pay the price for undercutting that narrative.
The next day, Trump put Vice President Mike Pence in charge of his coronavirus task force and assumed the role of communicator-in-chief. The CDC, which had been the public face of the government during every health crisis in memory, soon became nearly invisible. After a few more briefings, a Pence aide told the agency’s media staff that this was the president’s stage, not theirs.
P - Even when Redfield was allowed to speak publicly, his sleepy eyes and soft, droning tone anesthetized listeners. The agency had been effectively muzzled.
P - “When it mattered the most, they shut us up,”a senior CDC official said. “The threat is clear. If we want to ever be able to talk tomorrow or next week or next month — or whatever is being dangled in front of us, you stay inside the lines.”
P - A friend of one CDC scientist ribbed him: “We keep waiting for the CDC to show up on a milk carton as a missing child.”
P - In the months that followed, CDC scientists watching the president’s news conferences on a wall of screens in the agency’s Emergency Operations Center were dumbfounded as Trump countermanded science in a flurry of inaccuracies and dangerous advice, saying the virus would soon go away, theorizing about injecting disinfectant as a treatment, and dismissing recommendations about wearing a mask.
"

Related: Good man! Your comment on Trump cutting CDC during his term and overseas too reminded me...
[...]How Trump let coronavirus take over America
[...]Trump's "drain the swamp" means 'drain the expertise'. Excerpt from yours ..
"In May 2018, Trump ordered the NSC’s entire global health security unit shut down...
[...]with the video of Trump saying covid would just go away, and more, are here..
https://investorshub.advfn.com/boards/read_msg.aspx?message_id=164963124
It didn't strike me earlier, but that and and the long one - Inside the Fall of the CDC
March, 2023 - https://investorshub.advfn.com/boards/read_msg.aspx?message_id=171446036

Jill Margo Health editor
Apr 2, 2024 – 5.25pm

Australian authorities are tracking the outbreak of contagious avian flu in cows in the US.

The US Department of Agriculture has confirmed that cows in Texas, Kansas and Michigan have been infected with H5N1 bird flu, and herds in New Mexico and Idaho have had presumptive positive tests.

So far, one person in Texas, who had direct contact with dairy cattle, has tested positive. A public health alert was issued in Texas, asking healthcare providers to look out for symptoms in anyone exposed to an infected person or animal.

IMAGE --[/I]The US Department of Agriculture has confirmed that cows in Texas,
Kansas and Michigan have been infected with H5N1 bird flu. Louie Douvis

It is the first time the disease has been found in dairy cattle in the US and the second time an American has been infected with bird flu – in 2022, a person was infected from poultry in Colorado.

H5N1 belongs to the “highly contagious pathogenic avian influenza” (HPAI) viral family.

The US Centres for Disease Control and Prevention said while the risk assessment for the public was low it was a developing situation, and it is working with the Food and Drug Administration and the US Department of Agriculture.

As America’s commercial milk supply is pasteurised .. https://www.afr.com/markets/commodities/the-government-helped-dairy-farmers-and-created-another-problem-20231113-p5ejn8 , there are currently no concerns about its safety. Pasteurisation inactivates bacteria and viruses in milk.

IMAGE -- Flu surveillance expert Craig Dalton: “The alarm bells really go off
if human-to-human transmission occurs.” Eddie O’Reilly

“It is very difficult to predict what will happen,” said associate professor Craig Dalton, a flu surveillance expert from the University of Newcastle who has been watching the situation closely.

“We have been worried about H5N1 avian influenza jumping into humans since about 2005. Health departments were running H5N1 pandemic exercises and then the H1N1 swine flu pandemic came out of nowhere in 2009.”

Dr Dalton said movement of the bird flu strain into a broader range of mammals was concerning.

“It is one thing to see transmission direct from birds to mammals – with mammals as a ‘dead end’ host – but in recent days there is evidence of cow-to-cow transmission, with the US Department of Agriculture suggesting that infected cows have spread the disease when transported to other states.

“More concerning is that it suggests further adaptation for transmission in another mammal. We worry about the impact on livestock and the potential for adaptation for sustained transmission in humans.”

A spokesman for Australia’s Department of Agriculture said HPAI viruses had never been detected in wild birds, poultry, or livestock in this country.

There was no way to prevent new strains of avian influenza entering Australia with migratory wild birds, or transmission between wild birds, the spokesman said.

However, he said Australia had well-established emergency response plans for avian influenza and the department was working to increase awareness of the virus with poultry producers and people working with wild birds.

Health experts are watching for three things: transmission from cattle to farmworkers; transmission from workers to family members who had no exposure to cattle; and genetic analyses that suggest the virus is mutating, predisposing it to human infection.

“The alarm bells really go off if human-to-human transmission occurs,” said Dr Dalton, founder of FluTracking .. https://www.afr.com/policy/health-and-education/forget-a-royal-commission-next-pandemic-we-need-a-public-health-army-20220126-p59rd5 , now operating in Australia, New Zealand, Argentina and Hong Kong.

He said recent research looked at mammals infected with H5N1 over the last 20 years. Only 12 species were identified to 2019. More than 40 new species were identified through to 2023.

It was important to have enhanced surveillance for influenza in animals and detect new strains in humans as soon as possible, he said.

Human infections with H5N1 are uncommon, with symptoms ranging from mild to severe. The virus can be fatal.

Seasonal flu vaccines do not provide protection against these viruses, but new vaccines can likely be manufactured .. https://www.afr.com/companies/healthcare-and-fitness/uq-to-tackle-bird-flu-with-rebooted-covid-vaccine-20230419-p5d1rv .

It is thought mammals become infected when they interact with secretions from infected birds.

Jill Margo is the health editor, based in the Sydney office. Jill has won multiple prizes, including two Walkley Awards and is an adjunct associate professor at School of Clinical Medicine, Faculty of Medicine and Health, UNSW Sydney, Australia. Connect with Jill on Twitter. Email Jill at jmargo@afr.com

https://www.afr.com/world/north-america/australia-tracking-outbreak-of-avian-flu-in-us-cows-20240402-p5fgtx