Four former directors of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention — spanning Republican and Democratic administrations — did something unusual yesterday. Tom Frieden, Jeffrey Koplan, David Satcher, and Richard Besser got together and co-authored a Washington Post op-ed decrying the politicization of science in the Trump administration.
Their complaints are understandable. Donald Trump has repeatedly undermined or contradicted CDC guidance during the coronavirus crisis. Team Trump has also applied political pressure on the CDC, both publicly and privately. This week, the president went so far as to amplify a missive from a former gameshow host, who accused CDC scientists, among others, of lying to the public for political reasons.
But it’s one thing when the White House undermines public confidence in the CDC; it’s something else when Team Trump denies the CDC coronavirus data from hospitals.
The New York Times reported earlier Tuesday that the administration had ordered hospitals to bypass the CDC and send all COVID-19 patient information to a central database in Washington beginning Wednesday, raising concerns from health experts that it will be politicized or withheld from the public.
Andrea Mitchell, raising a concern shared by many, noted on Twitter, “This is a way to break the CDC by denying it essential data.”
Michael Caputo, a leading voice for Trump’s Department of Health and Human Services, told NBC News that the move was made to create a more efficient system.
Of course, Caputo is a notorious Republican political operative and a Roger Stone protégé — with no meaningful background in health care or medical data management — so it’s difficult to accept his assurances at face value.









