**FILE** Anthony Fauci (Official White House photo by Andrea Hanks)
**FILE** Anthony Fauci (Official White House photo by Andrea Hanks)

Dr. Anthony Fauci has embarked on somewhat of a media tour in recent weeks.

However, during a live interview with BlackPressUSA, the nationโ€™s foremost infectious disease expert delivered an abundance of breaking news.

The director of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases said a vaccine for the coronavirus is likely a few months away.

He noted that school reopenings should be tied to what the coronavirus pandemic looks like in a specific area.

โ€œThe fundamental principle is that we should try as best as we possibly can to get children back to school because we know the psychological aspect of that and the unintended consequences for mothers and fathers who may need to stop working, so we should try to get back to school,โ€ Fauci said. โ€œHowever, paramount needs to be the safety, health, and welfare of children, teachers and families.

โ€œWe live in a big country. Some places have low incidents and can open schools while some are high,โ€ he said. โ€œSome areas rate of infection is so high where itโ€™s not prudent to open schools. You donโ€™t want to endanger their health.โ€

A member of the White House Coronavirus Task Force, Fauci has at times found himself at odds with President Donald Trump. This year, the president announced that he would withdraw U.S. funding and support for the World Health Organization (WHO). Despite Trumpโ€™s decision, Fauci told BlackPressUSA that he maintains a close relationship with the organization.

โ€œI still work closely with the World Health Organization,โ€ Fauci said. โ€œIโ€™m on a weekly phone call with them, and I signed a memorandum of understanding. Weโ€™re all-in with the WHO.โ€

During the 30-minute interview that streamed live over Facebook, YouTube, and www.BlackPressUSA.com, Fauci spoke of the importance of convincing African Americans to participate in clinical trials and said school reopenings should depend mainly upon the location and the infection rate in a given area.

During the interview, which included National Newspaper Publishers Association President and CEO Benjamin F. Chavis Jr., Fauci also demonstrated the proper way to wear a face mask.

โ€œEarly on, there was a shortage of masks because we didnโ€™t want to take masks away from health providers who needed them,โ€ Fauci remarked. โ€œItโ€™s easy to get a cloth mask now.โ€

Fauci explained further that, โ€œwhen there are droplets when someone sneezes or coughs, you [are protected]. You can take [the mask] and wash it with soap and water or stick it in the washing machine.โ€

Addressing the disparities surrounding COVID-19 and other illnesses, Fauci pointed to many African Americans, Latinos and Native Americans occupying essential jobs that provide little protection.

โ€œOn the one hand, thereโ€™s a greater opportunity and risk of getting infected, but even as important is that once you get infected, you have prevalence and incidence of co-morbidities that make it more likely youโ€™ll get a severe outcome from the infection,โ€ Fauci noted. โ€œThose comorbidities are like diabetes, hypertension, heart disease, chronic kidney disease, and lung disease. Itโ€™s very clear that African Americans have a higher incidence, and the reality is that you suffer more.โ€

The hospitalization rates per 100,000 people are stunning when comparing African Americans and Caucasians, Fauci said.

โ€œIn many respects, itโ€™s unacceptable that it should be that way,โ€ he said, noting that the hospitalization rate per 100,000 African Americans stands at 247, compared to 53 per 100,000 whites.

โ€œIn other words, thatโ€™s almost five times the chance of getting hospitalized even though African Americans comprise just 13 percent of the [U.S.] population,โ€ Fauci observed. โ€œThatโ€™s more than something we need to deal with.โ€

Fauci added that there are five fundamental things everyone could do to help stop the spread of the coronavirus: โ€œWear a mask, avoid crowds of more than 10, keep a distance of at least six feet, locations should seriously consider closing bars and getting people who go to bars to stop or do it outside, and wash hands frequently either with soap and water or alcohol Purell.โ€

Clinical trials are vital, Fauci said.

โ€œWe hope that we will have an effective vaccine by the end of the year, which means that as we get into 2021, we want to distribute it for those who could benefit,โ€ he added. โ€œWe need to spend extra effort to protect African Americans, and the way you find out if the vaccine is effective is the enrollment in a vaccine trial. It would be a terrible shame if African Americans stayed away from clinical trials, and they didnโ€™t provide for themselves the vaccine that could protect them.โ€

Fauci suggested that he wears a mask everywhere goes and demanded that doing so shouldnโ€™t be about politics.

โ€œThis is about protecting each other. Weโ€™re all in this together,โ€ Fauci said. โ€œIโ€™m pleased to see that we now have the president talking about wearing a mask where he didnโ€™t before, and the vice president wears a mask everywhere he goes. Weโ€™ve got to pull together.โ€

Whether reinfection of the coronavirus can occur remains somewhat of a mystery, Fauci explained.

โ€œWhen you get infected with any virus, generally, when you recover, your body has made a good immune response to recover,โ€ he said. โ€œWe know that happens in people who had COVID-19. We donโ€™t know what the duration of that is. There are varying levels of antibodies in people who recover, and what weโ€™re following is how long they last. Some people find that it doesnโ€™t last very long.

โ€œThere are other types of immunity that go beyond, and theyโ€™re called T-cells or cellular immunity, which may also play a role in protecting people from being infected,โ€ Fauci said. โ€œLikely a degree of protection is pretty good for a finite period. There are no well-documented cases of people actually being reinfected. There have been some anecdotally stories of people recovering who seemed to have gotten infected, but we donโ€™t know. Thereโ€™s no real hard evidence thatโ€™s happening.โ€

Stacy M. Brown is a senior writer for The Washington Informer and the senior national correspondent for the Black Press of America. Stacy has more than 25 years of journalism experience and has authored...

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