Federal Task Force Calls Iowa Deaths ‘Preventable’
The White House Coronavirus Task force told Iowa officials in its most recent report that many virus-related deaths in the state were preventable.
The report dated Oct. 4 was released to the media a day after Gov. Kim Reynolds said Iowans “can’t let COVID-19 dominate our lives.” Average daily deaths have increased over the past two weeks to 10 per day. More than 250 people in Iowa have died in the past month alone.
“Community transmission has remained high across the state for the past month, with many preventable deaths,” the report dated Oct. 4 said. Reynolds bristled when asked why she hadn’t taken more steps to reduce coronavirus spread.
“We are doing a lot and I’m proud of what we’re doing, but you know what, any death is one too many and it’s heart-wrenching to see the numbers but I have to balance a lot,” she said.
Iowa Department of Public Health spokeswoman Amy McCoy said the state is following many of the recommendations of the task force, including enforcing social distancing measures in bars and restaurants, reaching out to community leaders and expanding testing capacity.
Reports for months have recommended a mask requirement for Iowa, which Reynolds refused to adopt. The latest report says messaging to communities about effectiveness of masks is critical as many outdoor activities will be moving indoors with colder weather.
“Masks must be worn indoors in all public settings and group gathering sizes should be limited,” the report said. “Work with rural communities to message masks work and protect individuals from COVID-19.”
Reynolds has declined to require mask use, including in schools where she requires students to spend at least half of their instructional time in classrooms.
Hospitalizations rose to 449 last Thursday, a after Reynolds acknowledged a new record of 444 was set. Reynolds said that the health care system could handle the increase and no further action was needed.
Reynolds has lifted most business restrictions and continues to pursue a strategy of pushing personal responsibility as her primary public health policy approach to addressing the coronavirus pandemic.
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