Iowa senator appears to backtrack on suggestion Covid-19 deaths are overcounted
The assertion that Covid-19 cases are overcounted has been debunked by US health officials, including Dr. Anthony Fauci, director of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases.
“The numbers that you’ve been hearing, the 180,000-plus deaths, are real deaths from Covid-19,” Fauci told ABC’s Good Morning America on Tuesday. Many medical experts have insisted the Covid-19 death toll is actually being undercounted.
When CNN asked Ernst’s staff Wednesday to clarify the senator’s views, Ernst issued a statement that did not specifically retract her comments from Monday but that did acknowledge the latest coronavirus death toll as reported by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention and US health officials.
“Over 180,000 Americans have died because of COVID-19,” Ernst said. “What matters is that we are getting the resources to Iowa that are needed to fight this virus and continuing to support our health care workers on the front lines, and that’s what I’m focused on.”
At the same event in Black Hawk County, the senator also threw out a serious charge against medical professionals — suggesting they are fraudulently inflating the numbers of coronavirus patients in order to make more money. There is no evidence to suggest this, and health care professionals have strongly denied the baseless attack.
“These health care providers and others are reimbursed at a higher rate if Covid is tied to it, so what do you think they’re doing?” she asked the crowd, according to the Courier.
Following the event, Ernst clarified to the Courier she did not seem to know for a fact that health care providers were doing this, but it’s something she “heard on the news” as well as from “health care providers and others.”
Ernst’s office didn’t immediately reply to CNN’s request for comment about her suggestion about reimbursements.
But when asked if that was the motive and if she thought the numbers were inflated because of the higher reimbursements, she told the Courier: “That I’m not sure, and again that’s why I want somebody to really go back and do a good fact check on this and I don’t have the means to do that … but I do think that should be discussed because I heard the same thing on the news you know traveling across the state today.”
She added: “They’re thinking there may be 10,000 or less deaths that were actually singularly Covid-19. Now, no doubt that there are deaths and it creates complications with those that have other illnesses certainly, but those just attributable to Covid-19, I’m just really curious. It would be interesting to know that.”
The CDC confirmed that deaths counted as coronavirus deaths are truly deaths caused by Covid-19.
“In 92% of all deaths that mention COVID-19, COVID-19 is listed as the underlying cause of death,” the CDC said in a statement sent to CNN. Death certificates usually list other, underlying conditions that people had when they died, including high blood pressure.
Dr. Glenn Hurst, a family medicine doctor and chair of the Iowa Democratic Party rural caucus, called Ernst’s remarks “incredibly offensive” in an interview with CNN’s Brianna Keiler on Wednesday.
“It’s an offensive attack on some of the best Iowans out there on the front lines,” Hurst told CNN.
CNN’s Ted Barrett, Betsy Klein, Daniel Dale and Jamie Gumbrecht contributed to this report.