WASHINGTON
(AP) — For many in the public health and political worlds, Dr. Deborah
Birx is the sober scientist advising an unpredictable president. She’s
the data whisperer who will help steer President Donald Trump as he
ponders how quickly to restart an economy that’s ground to a halt in the
coronavirus pandemic.
Others
worry that Birx, who stepped away from her job as the U.S. global AIDS
coordinator to help lead the White House coronavirus response, may be
offering Trump cover to follow some of his worst instincts as he
considers whether to have people packing the pews by Easter Sunday.
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In
coming days, immunologist Birx will be front and center in that debate
along with the U.S. government’s foremost infection disease expert, Dr.
Anthony Fauci, as well as Vice President Mike Pence. Birx will bring to
the discussion what she fondly refers to as her sheet music — data on
testing, mortality, demographics and much more.
“What the president has asked us to do is to assemble all the data and
give him our best medical recommendation based on all the data,” Birx
told reporters. “This is consistent with our mandate to really use every
piece of information that we can in order to give the president our
opinion that’s backed up by data.”
But will Trump listen?
The
president has sent mixed messages on that. He plans to meet with the
two doctors and Pence on Monday to review the latest data on the spread
of the disease. His administration’s original 15-day guidelines
promoting social distancing expire Tuesday.
Over
a matter of weeks, Trump has veered from playing down the virus threat
to warning Americans it could be summer before the pandemic is under
control. And in more recent days, he’s talked eagerly about having parts
of the country raring back by Easter in two weeks.
As
the president’s message has vacillated, Birx has emerged as one of the
most important voices laying out the administration’s pandemic response.
She has a way of spelling out the implications of the virus to
Americans in personal terms while offering reassurances that the
administration is approaching the pandemic with a data-driven mindset.
For
most people, the new coronavirus causes mild or moderate symptoms, such
as fever and cough that clear up in two to three weeks. For some,
especially older adults and people with existing health problems, it can
cause more severe illness, including pneumonia, and death.
Former
Health and Human Services Secretary Kathleen Sebelius, who helped
shepherd Birx’s ambassadorial nomination through the Senate in the Obama
administration, said it’s like Birx and Fauci have become a tag team
for science in the midst of calamity.
“I
can’t imagine how complicated it is to have a boss –- if you will — who
insists on saying things on a regular basis that are just not true and
aren’t based on any science,” Sebelius said.
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In
her public comments, Birx has taken pains to avoid publicly
contradicting Trump when he’s offered some decidedly unscientific riffs,
unlike Fauci, a professional mentor, who has been known to push back
pointedly.
Instead,
her messaging has toggled between providing digestible interpretations
of what the data is saying about the spread of the virus and offering
relatable pleas to the American public to practice social distancing to
help stem the disease.
In
recent days, Birx has received praise from Trump backers and pushback
from some fellow scientists after she minimized what she called “very
scary” statistical modeling by some infectious disease experts.
One
study, published this month by Harvard University epidemiologists,
found that the need to maintain social distancing remains crucial in the
weeks ahead to prevent the American healthcare system from becoming
overwhelmed by new cases.
“The
scenario Dr. Birx is ‘assuring’ us about is one in which we somehow
escape Italy’s problem of overloaded healthcare system despite the fact
that social distancing is not really happening in large parts of the
US,” Marc Lipsitch, a co-author of the study, wrote on Twitter.
Birx
also has drawn criticism for asserting that there are still beds in
intensive care units and a “significant” number of ventilators available
in hospitals around New York City -- the area hardest hit by virus.
That message doesn’t jibe with the dire warnings of city hospital
workers, who in recent days have said they’re ill-equipped and in danger
of being overwhelmed by patients stricken with the virus.
Birx’s
friends and colleagues say she is one of the adults in the room who is
providing the president with clear-headed advice and giving Americans
the information they need to stay safe.
“She’s
a tough cookie,” said Michael Weinstein, who heads the AIDS Healthcare
Foundation and got to know Birx professionally after she was named the
global AIDS coordinator in 2014. “She’s 100% about the data.”
In
the sea of men in dark suits who have been appearing with Trump for
daily briefings, the 63-year-old mother of two with a fondness for
colorful scarves stands out. Her seemingly endless scarf collection was
even fodder for comedian Paula Poundstone recently on the NPR quiz show
“Wait Wait...Don’t tell me!”
Birx’s
resume is impressive: She is a U.S. Army physician and recognized AIDS
researcher who rose to the rank of colonel, head of the global AIDS
program at the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, and a rare
Obama administration holdover as the State Department’s
ambassador-at-large leading a U.S. taxpayer-funded worldwide campaign to
stop the spread of HIV/AIDS.
Birx
has also developed a reputation as a tough boss. Some who fall under
her watch at the global effort known as PEPFAR have complained that the
leadership of her office has been“dictatorial” and “autocratic,”
according to a State Department Office of Inspector General audit
released earlier this year.
“She
has somewhat of a reputation of being a hard task-master,” said John
Auerbach, head of the nonprofit Trust for America’s Health.. “She is
incredibly hard-working, someone who was driven and would drive other
people to work really hard and to do their best work.”
Birx
has also been perhaps the most outspoken in calling for Americans to be
mindful in how they are interacting with others. And she’s made the
case in personal terms.
The
doctor says she’s avoided visiting with her young grandchildren as she
practices social distancing, and she’s spoken in admiring tones of her
two millennial daughters when making the case that younger Americans’
actions will play a key role in determining how quickly the country can
contain the virus.
She
also has spoken of her grandmother living with a lifetime of guilt,
because she caught the flu at school as a girl and, in turn, infected
her mother — one of an estimated 50 million people worldwide who died in
the 1918 influenza epidemic.
“She
never forgot that she was the child that was in school that innocently
bought that flu home,” Birx said of her grandmother.
Birx,
who declined to be interviewed for this article, told a Christian TV
network popular with Trump’s evangelical base that she’s confident that
the president is, like her, a student of data.
“He’s
been so attentive to the scientific literature and the details and the
data,” Birx told CBN. “I think his ability to analyze and integrate data
that comes out of his long history in business has really been a real
benefit during these discussions about medical issues because in the
end, data is data.”
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