In a first, small
step toward reopening the country, the Trump administration issued new
guidelines Wednesday to make it easier for essential workers who have
been exposed to COVID-19 to get back to work if they do not have
symptoms of the coronavirus.
Dr. Robert Redfield,
director of the the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention,
announced at the White House that essential employees, such as health
care and food supply workers, who have been within 6 feet of a confirmed
or suspected case of the virus can return to work under certain
circumstances if they are not experiencing symptoms.
The new guidelines
are being issued as the nation mourns more than 14,000 deaths from the
virus and grapples with a devastated economy and medical crises from
coast to coast. Health experts continue to caution Americans to practice
social distancing and to avoid returning to their normal activities. At
the same time, though, they are planning for a time when the most
serious threat from COVID-19 will be in the country’s rear-view mirror.
President Donald
Trump said that while he knows workers are “going stir crazy” at home,
he can’t predict when the threat from the virus will wane.
“The numbers are
changing and they’re changing rapidly and soon we’ll be over that curve.
We’ll be over the top and we’ll be headed in the right direction. I
feel strongly about that,” Trump said about the coronavirus, which he
called “this evil beast.”
“I can’t tell you in
terms of the date,” Trump said, adding cases could go down and then
once again “start going up if we’re not careful. ”
At some point, he
said at his daily briefing, social distancing guidelines will disappear
and people will be able to sit together at sports events. “At some point
we expect to be back, like it was before,” he said.
Dr. Anthony Fauci,
the nation’s top infectious disease expert, said if the existing
guidelines asking people to practice social distancing through the end
of April are successful in halting the spread of the virus, more relaxed
recommendations could be in order.
He said the White
House task force was trying to dovetail public health concerns with
practical steps that need to be in place when the 30-day guidelines end
at the end of the month so the nation can “safely and carefully march
toward some sort of normality.”
If, by fall, things
start to return to normal, Americans will still need to wash their hands
frequently, sick schoolchildren should be kept home and people with
fevers need to refrain from going to work, Fauci said during an online
interview Wednesday with the editor of the Journal of the American
Medical Association.
People also should never shake hands again, Fauci said, only half-jokingly.
“I mean it sounds
crazy, but that’s the way it’s really got to be,” he said. “Until we get
to a point where we know the population is protected” with a vaccine.
Under the new
guidelines for essential workers, the CDC recommends that exposed
employees take their temperatures before their shifts, wear face masks
and practice social distancing at work. They also are advised to stay
home if they are ill, not share headsets or other objects used near the
face and refrain from congregating in crowded break rooms.
Employers are asked
to take exposed workers’ temperatures and assess symptoms before
allowing them to return to work, aggressively clean work surfaces, send
workers home if they get sick and increase air exchange in workplaces.
Fauci said he hoped
the pandemic would prompt the U.S. to look at long-term investments in
public health, specifically at the state and local level. Preparedness
that was not in place in January needs to be in place if or when
COVID-19 or another virus threatens the country.
“We have a habit of
whenever we get over a challenge, we say, ‘OK, let’s move on to the
current problem,’” he said. “We should never, ever be in a position of
getting hit like this and have to scramble to respond again. This is
historic.”
Even the new guidelines will not be a foolproof guard against spreading infection.
Recent studies have
suggested that somewhere around 10% of new infections might be sparked
by contact with individuals who are infected but do not yet exhibit
symptoms. Scientists say it’s also possible that some people who develop
symptoms and then recover from the virus remain contagious, or that
some who are infected and contagious may never develop symptoms.
As of Wednesday, the U.S. had more than 400,000 confirmed cases of infection.
https://apnews.com/fab319a90ead9aae057f7fab059c2ccb
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