As Coronavirus Tolls Climb, the White Home Has Questioned the Numbers

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As Coronavirus Tolls Climb, the White Home Has Questioned the Numbers

WASHINGTON — President Trump, desirous to reopen the economic system, has begun questioning the official coronavirus demise toll, suggesting the nu


WASHINGTON — President Trump, desirous to reopen the economic system, has begun questioning the official coronavirus demise toll, suggesting the numbers, which have hobbled his approval rankings and harmed his re-election prospects, are inflated.

In coronavirus activity power and different White Home conferences, conversations with well being officers have returned to related suspicions: that the info compiled by state well being departments and the Facilities for Illness Management and Prevention embody individuals who have died with the coronavirus however of different situations. The numbers, some say, embody too many “presumed” instances of Covid-19 and too many People who have been by no means examined for the illness.

Final Friday, Mr. Trump advised reporters that he accepted the present demise toll, however that the figures might be “decrease than” the official depend, which now totals practically 95,000.

Dr. Anthony S. Fauci, the nation’s top infectious disease expert, told lawmakers this month that the overall toll was likely an undercount. “I don’t know exactly what percent higher but almost certainly it is higher,” he said at a Senate health committee hearing.

“We very much feel the reported numbers reflect an undercount,” she said.

Inside the White House, doubts about the official numbers are pervasive, though they come in different forms. Mr. Trump is in search of good news to promote his administration’s response to the pandemic and to press states to reopen. Dr. Deborah L. Birx, the White House’s coronavirus response coordinator, is a numbers obsessive and wants her own data to supplement information coming in from the states and the C.D.C. One official has even accused hospitals of potentially exaggerating their coronavirus patient counts to milk money from Medicare.

Top White House officials have even discussed appointing a “forensic” team to audit how some hospital systems and state health departments have been tallying infections and deaths, according to one senior administration official. Multiple senior White House officials said they were unaware of such conversations.

In a brief interview Thursday, Dr. Birx stressed that there had been no pressure to alter data. “I’ve never been in a meeting where anyone has discussed changing the death numbers,” she said.

And she disputed that the White House was debating the C.D.C.’s counting of probable infections. “There is no tension about their presumed cases,” she said.

But she herself has said publicly that the American health care system incorporates a generous definition of a death caused by Covid-19, the disease caused by the coronavirus.

“In this country we’ve taken a very liberal approach to mortality,” Dr. Birx said at a White House news conference last month. “There are other countries that if you had a pre-existing condition, and let’s say the virus caused you to go to the I.C.U., and then have a heart or kidney problem — some countries are recording that as a heart issue or a kidney issue and not a Covid-19 death.”

Robert Anderson, who runs the mortality statistics branch of the C.D.C.’s National Center for Health Statistics, said the federal government deployed two parallel, related systems to tally deaths, one based on case reports and one on death certificates. He said it was unlikely that there was any kind of overcount.

“The case reporting system asks: Did the patient die from this illness?” he said. “It’s not asking if the patient with Covid-19 died. It’s asking if they died from Covid-19.”

A death certificate, Mr. Anderson said, clearly establishes a cause of death or a contributing factor.

That has not deterred some at the White House to search for new data. Dr. Birx often begins her days before 5 a.m. examining fresh numbers from a small group of Trump administration officials who work late nights in the White House complex.

Detailed to Dr. Birx from the C.D.C., the State Department, the White House budget office and a technology agency called the U.S. Digital Service, the employees compile their own information about the pandemic from state and local health departments in hard-hit parts of the country. That data is then shared with the White House’s coronavirus task force.

White House officials say skepticism in the Trump administration over C.D.C. data, including for opioid use, long predates the coronavirus outbreak. But new reasons have cropped up.

At least one senior White House official has mentioned that hospitals could be inflating their coronavirus patient counts, responding to financial incentives — Medicare offers higher payments to providers for treating coronavirus patients. Several senior officials said they were unaware of such talk.

An official with the American Hospital Association disputed that idea.

“There’s guidance around what you have to do, and the clinician has to say, ‘This is the diagnosis,’” said Nancy Foster, the association’s vice president for quality and patient safety policy. “They’re putting their professional reputation on the line to say that.”

“There is no organization on earth better at standardizing surveillance than the C.D.C.,” said Dr. Thomas R. Frieden, the agency’s former director. “Could it be better? Absolutely. It could be more timely. It could be more complete.”

“If you set up parallel tracks, you will get inconsistent information,” Dr. Frieden said. “You can ask different questions at different times and get different answers.”

Mr. Anderson of the C.D.C. said in an interview that the agency was looking at new systems, including artificial intelligence, to get a better grip on coronavirus trends. “We are in the process of exploring some machine learning and A.I. techniques to try to make the coding more efficient and make the system more nimble,” he said.

Last Friday, Colorado’s health department revised its death toll downward, forming two categories to account for what it said were patients who had Covid-19 but died from other causes.

Trying to separate the cause of death in coronavirus-infected patients is “ludicrous,” said Dr. Alicia Skarimbas, a physician in Bergen County, N.J., who has treated around 75 Covid-19 patients.

“I have yet to have anyone infected with Covid die from anything else,” she said.

Noah Weiland and Abby Goodnough reported from Washington, and Maggie Haberman from New York.



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