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Trump鈥檚 Take On COVID Testing Misses Public Health Realities

鈥淚f we stopped testing right now, we'd have very few cases, if any.鈥

鈥 President Donald Trump in remarks during a June 15 roundtable discussion

President Donald Trump sought to downplay the numbers associated with COVID-19 in the United States 鈥 which have passed 2 million confirmed cases and are nearing 120,000 lives lost 鈥 by arguing that the soaring national count was simply the result of superior testing.

鈥淚f you don't test, you don't have any cases,鈥 Trump at a at the White House. 鈥淚f we stopped testing right now, we'd have very few cases, if any.鈥

It鈥檚 a talking point the administration is emphasizing. Vice President Mike Pence during a phone call to Republican governors that evening, recommending they use the argument as a strategy to quiet public concern about surging case tallies in some states. It鈥檚 also a variation on a the president sent earlier in the day.

With that in mind, we wanted to dig deeper. We reached out to the White House for comment or clarification, but we never heard back. Independent researchers told us, though, that the president鈥檚 remarks are not only misleading 鈥 they鈥檙e also counterproductive in terms of thinking through what鈥檚 needed to combat the coronavirus pandemic.

The Big Picture

Essentially, the president is arguing that the United States is finding more cases of COVID-19 because we are testing more 鈥 and that our increased testing makes it appear the pandemic is worse in the U.S. than in other countries.

鈥淲e will show more 鈥 more cases when other countries have far more cases than we do; they just don鈥檛 talk about it,鈥 he added.

But that isn鈥檛 true.

The numbers paint a stark picture. The United States has recorded of the novel virus so far, about a quarter of the global total and more than any other country. To Trump鈥檚 point, the country now than it did at the start of the outbreak 鈥 per capita, the U.S. is in the top 20% of countries when it comes to cumulative tests run.

This beefed-up testing still likely reflects an undercount in cases, though. The problem is that the U.S. outbreak is worse than that of many other countries 鈥 so we need to be testing a higher percentage of our population than do others.

To best understand this, consider the to identify a positive case. If it鈥檚 easier to find a positive case, that suggests the virus has spread further and more testing is necessary to track the spread of COVID-19.

For instance, statistics from the United States and the United Kingdom are fairly similar in terms of how many coronavirus tests are done daily per million people. But those tests yield far more positive cases in the United States. That suggests the outbreak here requires more per capita testing than does the U.K.鈥檚.

鈥淲e have a much bigger epidemic, so you have to test more proportionately,鈥 said Jennifer Kates, a senior vice president at KFF.

Put another way, a larger health crisis means 鈥 even after controlling for population size 鈥 the United States will have to test more people to find out where and how the virus has spread. (KHN is an editorially independent program of KFF, the Kaiser Family Foundation.)

And while the U.S. has ramped up its testing since March, many parts of the country still don鈥檛 have sufficient systems in place 鈥 from facilities to staff to medical supplies 鈥 for diagnosing COVID-19, researchers told us.

What If We Stopped Testing?

And what about the president鈥檚 assertion that 鈥渋f we stopped testing right now, we鈥檇 have very few cases鈥 or none at all?

On its literal phrasing, it鈥檚 absurd, experts said.

鈥淭he implication that not testing makes the problem go away is completely false. It could not be more false,鈥 said Dr. Joshua Sharfstein, vice dean for public health practice and community engagement at the Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health in Baltimore. That鈥檚 because testing doesn鈥檛 create instances of the virus 鈥 it is just a way of showing and tracking them. (The president made a similar point during the same White House roundtable event.)

But even if you take it figuratively 鈥 the idea that our expanded testing resources have inflated our sense of the epidemic 鈥 it鈥檚 still misleading.

鈥淲e鈥檙e seeing a lot of cases because we鈥檙e testing? It just doesn鈥檛 ring true,鈥 Kates said. 鈥淭he U.S. has made a lot of progress for sure. But that job is not finished.鈥

The president鈥檚 claim is part of a larger reelection strategy, argued Robert Blendon, a health care pollster at the Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health. The idea is to suggest that the health crisis is mostly exaggerated 鈥 and that things are getting better, and Americans should feel comfortable going back to work. 鈥淚f the economy takes off, the president has a chance of reelection,鈥 Blendon said. 鈥淚f it contracts as a result of expansion of cases, and the only way we know how to respond is restriction of economic activity, he鈥檚 gone.鈥

But the problem, Blendon added, is that COVID-19 counts are still climbing in multiple states. And people are still dying of the virus.

That gets at another point: Diagnostic testing isn鈥檛 the only data source to reveal the pandemic鈥檚 existence. Let鈥檚 not forget about hospitalization rates and death counts. The number of deaths continues to rise, and hospitalizations are higher than they would be in the virus鈥檚 absence.

Our Ruling

Trump argued that the nation鈥檚 high count of COVID-19 cases is simply a result of our expanded testing capacity. His point is entirely incorrect.

The most relevant data suggests that the U.S. isn鈥檛 testing enough to match the severity of the pandemic. Even with our higher testing ratio, we鈥檙e probably still undercounting compared with other countries.

Testing doesn鈥檛 create the virus. Even without diagnostics, COVID-19 would still pose a problem. We just would know less about it.

And, in fact, eliminating testing may alter the public鈥檚 perception of the pandemic but it wouldn鈥檛 conceal it. If anything, it would likely worsen the crisis, since the public health system wouldn鈥檛 know how to accurately track and prevent the spread of the coronavirus.

The president鈥檚 claim has no merit and seriously misrepresents the severity of the public health crisis. We rate it Pants on Fire.

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