Coronavirus

Birx Tells 11 Cities To Take 'Aggressive' Action Against Virus

The White House task force member talked privately with city leaders about positivity spikes appearing in coronavirus tests.

Birx Tells 11 Cities To Take 'Aggressive' Action Against Virus
Manuel Balcer Ceneta
SMS

The White House has reportedly told leaders in 11 major cities to take "aggressive" action against the coronavirus. The Center for Public Integrity says the private conversations were prompted by rising rates of positivity in COVID-19 testing.

Dr. Deborah Birx made calls Wednesday to Baltimore, Cleveland, Columbus, Indianapolis and Las Vegas. Also on the list were Miami, Minneapolis, Nashville, New Orleans, Pittsburgh and St. Louis. Birx told those cities their rising positivity rates require them to take serious steps to curb the spread.

The White House Coronavirus Task Force coordinator warned leaders that small positivity rate increases can quickly spiral out of control.

In an audio recording of the call, Birx said: "When you first see that increase in test positivity, that is when to start the mitigation efforts. I know it may look small and you may say, 'That only went from 5 to 5-and-a-half (percent), and we’re gonna wait and see what happens.' If you wait another three or four or even five days, you’ll start to see a dramatic increase in cases."

The Center for Public Integrity quoted critics criticizing the White House for talking with local officials in private conversations about coronavirus outbreaks and leaving the public out.

Last week, the center released a private White House report of states in a "red zone" for COVID-19 cases. The organization describes itself as a non-profit newsroom focusing on the influence of money and the impact of inequality on society.

Contains audio from D.C.-based nonprofit newsroom The Center for Public Integrity.