COVID-19

Sun rays, disinfectants and false hopes: Misinformation litters the road to reopening

Southern Star Tattoo in Atlanta seen Thursday. Georgia Gov. Brian Kemp is easing restrictions to reopen the state's economy starting Friday.
Southern Star Tattoo in Atlanta seen Thursday. Georgia Gov. Brian Kemp is easing restrictions to reopen the state's economy starting Friday.
Tami Chappell | AFP via Getty Images

Georgia is set to open up lots of businesses statewide Friday — despite not meeting the benchmarks to move into Phase One of the White House's reopening guidelines.

Even President Trump, who said at the White House coronavirus task force briefing Thursday that it's "awe-inspiring" to see states opening up, thinks Kemp is moving too fast.

"I didn't like to see spas opening, frankly," Trump said. "I didn't like to see a lot of things happening. And I wasn't happy with it. And I wasn't happy with Brian Kemp. I wasn't at all happy."

Here's why — Georgia's confirmed coronavirus cases and deaths from COVID-19 are still steadily rising, and the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (which happens to be based in Atlanta) describes community spread coronavirus as "widespread" in the state. That goes against all the principles laid out in the guidelines.

Measured against other states, Georgia is nowhere near the bottom for cases — it has actually had the 12th most over the past three weeks.

Let's take a look at those guidelines point by point and see how Georgia stacks up:

On symptoms

Downward trajectory of flu-like illnesses reported within a 14-day period:

Or...

Downward trajectory of COVID-like syndromic cases reported within a 14-day period:

On cases

Downward trajectory of documented cases within a 14-day period:

Or...

Downward trajectory of positive tests as a percent of total tests within a 14-day period:

On hospitals

Treat all patients without crisis care:

  • No. There is no evidence that the state has been able to treat all hospital patients without crisis care. Atlanta's mayor has warned of the strain the city's hospitals are facing in attempting to treat the disease.

And...

Robust testing program in place for at-risk health care workers, including emerging antibody testing.

  • Unclear. The reliability of early antibody testing nationally has been called into question. On March 31, Kemp's office announced it was trying to rapidly ramp up COVID-19 testing. But, as of Wednesday, Georgia Tech, for example, said it was "burning the midnight oil to produce key components for tests in the state of Georgia."

Trump said he told Kemp "you're not in guidelines," but also that "I'm letting you make your own decision, but I want people to be safe, and I want the people in Georgia to be safe. And I don't want this thing to flare up, because you're deciding to do something that is not in the guidelines.'"

As of Thursday evening, there were almost 22,000 confirmed cases of COVID-19 in Georgia, according to the state's daily status report. At least 881 people have died from the virus. And both of those are on the rise.

That's part of why the Institute for Health Metrics and Evaluations, or IMHE, at the University of Washington, on Thursday pushed its projected date for when it sees when Georgia could start a careful reopening.

That date isn't April 24, it was June 22. According to the model, it has not passed its peak for projected deaths or hospital use.

Trump is giving Kemp and other governors the space — for now — to proceed as they want, but it's a risky experiment with people's lives at stake.

President Trump pauses while speaking about the coronavirus at White House Thursday.
President Trump pauses while speaking about the coronavirus at White House Thursday.
Alex Brandon/AP

Fact check: Let the sun shine?

President Trump took the old saying that "sunlight is the best disinfectant" to a whole new level at Thursday's briefing. He had William Bryan, the science and technology adviser to the secretary of the Department of Homeland Security, give a presentation about admittedly "emerging" results that coronavirus could slow with direct sunlight and humidity.

Now, there is some evidence, as NPR has reported, that respiratory viruses are slowed when there's more water vapor in the air. It makes it harder for the droplets to spread. Cold, dry air makes it easier.

But instead of sticking to that reasonable explanation, and despite Bryan's caveat that "it would be irresponsible" to say "summer is going to totally kill the virus," Trump waded into speculation of the potential of powerful lights and disinfectants to clean the lungs.

Here's what the president said:

"Supposing we hit the body with a tremendous whether it's ultraviolet or very powerful light. And I think you said that hasn't been checked, but you're going to test it. And then I said supposing you brought the light inside the body, which you could do either through the skin or in some other way, and I think you said you were going to test that, too. Sounds interesting. 

"And then I see the disinfectant, where it knocks it out in a minute, one minute, and is there a way we can do something like that, by injection inside or almost a cleaning, because you see it gets in the lungs, and it does a tremendous number on the lungs, so it'd be interesting to check that, so that you're going to have to use medical doctors with, but it sounds--, it sounds interesting to me. So we'll see, but the whole concept of the light, the way it goes, the way it kills it in one minute, that's, uh, that's pretty powerful. 

He went on to ask Dr. Deborah Birx, response coordinator of the coronavirus task force if she's heard using "the heat and the light" to treat coronavirus.

"Not as a treatment," she responded.

Trump boasted at one point: "It dies very quickly with the sun" and that "I think a lot of people are going to go outside all of a sudden."

One reporter asked why there'd been a hot spot then in a hot and humid place, like New Orleans.

When another reporter pointed out that people are tuning in for information about what to do to stay safe, Trump fired back.

"I'm the president, and you are fake news," he said, adding what he's saying about heat and light is "just a suggestion. We're here to present ideas."

But when leaders throw out unvetted and unproven suggestions, it just creates more chaos and confusion.

The briefing in brief

Here are other highlights from Thursday's White House coronavirus task force's daily briefing:

  • Another testing flap: Top infectious disease expert Dr. Anthony Fauci told Time before the briefing Thursday that the U.S. needs to "significantly ramp up not only the number of tests but the capacity to perform them," and that "I am not overly confident right now at all that we have what it takes to do that. We are doing better, and I think we are going to get there, but we are not there yet." Trump he disagreed with him. "No, I don't agree with him on that," he said.

  • Testing, testing, is this thing on? Vice President Mike Pence said the U.S. has now done the most tests in the world. He added that said states are engaging commercial labs at a higher level and that the U.S. conducted the most tests it has in a single day Wednesday. But Trump again took it too far. There were about 24 million tests conducted worldwide, as of Thursday afternoon. The U.S. had conducted about 4.5 million by that point. That means the rest of the world combined has conducted more than 19 million. That's substantially more. And yet Trump continues to make this false claim.

  • Biden wants to debate Trump, but Trump claims he doesn't: Trump attacked presumptive Democratic nominee Joe Biden in an odd way Thursday. He said Biden was hiding out in his basement and claimed Biden didn't want to debate him. Biden, however, has said the very same day before the briefing that he is open to debating Trump, even under current mitigation standards. "Zoom or Skype or Slack or Hangouts or in person, anytime, anywhere he wants," Biden reportedly told supporters during an online fundraiser on Thursday. 

  • Reopening plans submitted and elective surgeries may restart: Pence said 16 states have released formal reopening plans and they are submitting their own phased approaches based on the federal guidelines. Pence also said that he's encouraging states to restart elective surgeries — they have already begun in Indiana and will begin again soon in Arizona.

People visit poppy fields near the Antelope Valley California Poppy Reserve earlier this month in Lancaster, Calif.
People visit poppy fields near the Antelope Valley California Poppy Reserve earlier this month in Lancaster, Calif.
Frederic J. Brown/AFP via Getty Images

Quote of the briefing

"We'll see what happens. We've had a lot of very good results, and we had some results that perhaps aren't so good. I don't know. I just read about one, but I also read many times good, so I haven't at all, and I'd say it's a great — for malaria, for lupus for other things, and we'll see what it is, but I guess, Deborah, they have many studies going on on that. So we'll be able to learn."

— Trump on why he's scaled back his promotion of hydroxcholorquine to treat coronavirus. Deborah, at the end of his remark, is Dr. Birx.

Other key coronavirus stories from NPR

Coronavirus has infected a fifth Of New York City, testing suggests: Some 2.7 million New Yorkers may have already been infected with COVID-19, highlighting the extreme reach of the virus.

Scientists probe how coronavirus might travel through the Air: Researchers are investigating exactly how COVID-19 could spread, including examining the possibility of the virus traveling through the air a person expels when breathing or speaking.

Virus researchers cast doubt on theory of coronavirus lab accident: The Trump administration has advanced a theory that the coronavirus may have released as a result of a lab accident in Wuhan, China, but virus researchers interviewed by NPR say that it would be nearly impossible for the virus to have emerged under such circumstances.

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