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Brazil’s health minister resigns after less than a month on the job

Brazil's Health Minister Nelson Teich
Brazil’s health minister, Nelson Teich, has resigned after less than a month on the job amid continuing disagreements with the president over how the nation is handling the COVID-19 pandemic.
(Eraldo Peres / Associated Press)
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Brazil’s health minister resigned Friday after less than a month on the job in a sign of continuing upheaval in the nation’s battle with the COVID-19 pandemic and President Jair Bolsonaro’s pressure for the nation to prioritize the economy over health-driven lockdowns.

Nelson Teich’s resignation was confirmed by the Health Ministry. An oncologist and former healthcare consultant, Teich took the job April 17 under pressure to align the ministry’s actions with the president’s view that the economy must not be sacrificed to controlling the spread of the virus.

Officials say that more than 13,000 people have died of COVID-19 in Brazil, though some experts say the figure is most assuredly significantly higher due to insufficient testing, and analysts say the peak of the crisis has yet to hit Latin America’s largest nation.

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Teich’s top assistant, Gen. Eduardo Pazuello, who had no health experience until joining the ministry in April, will be the interim minister until Bolsonaro chooses a permanent replacement

Teich’s resignation comes one day after Bolsonaro told business leaders in a video conference that he would ease rules for use of the antimalaria drug chloroquine to treat people infected with the coronavirus. The outgoing health minister has frequently called the use of chloroquine “an uncertainty” in the fight against the virus, and this week warned of its side effects.

The Health Ministry previously allowed the use of chloroquine only for coronavirus patients hospitalized in serious condition.

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As the coronavirus crisis worsens in Brazil, President Jair Bolsonaro still balks at acknowledging the urgency.

At Bolsonaro’s urging, the country’s Army Chemical and Pharmaceutical Laboratory boosted chloroquine production in late March.

The antimalarial drug was widely touted by President Trump as a treatment. But researchers last month reported no benefit from it or a related drug, hydroxychloroquine, in a large analysis conducted at U.S. veterans hospitals. Last month, scientists in Brazil stopped part of a study of chloroquine after heart rhythm problems developed in one-quarter of people given the higher of two doses being tested.

Brazil’s governors, who have taken a more cautious road than Bolsonaro’s during the pandemic, praised Teich’s efforts.

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Rio de Janeiro Gov. Wilson Witzel, a former ally of Bolsonaro’s, said “no one can do serious work with interference in ministries and in the federal police.”

“That is why governors and mayors need to lead the pandemic crisis, and not you, Mr. President,” Witzel said on Twitter.

The governor of Ceara, one of Brazil’s most hard-hit states, said Teich’s exit “brings enormous insecurity and concern.”

“It is unacceptable that, before this serious health crisis that we face, the focus of the government is still on political and ideological discussions. That is an affront to the nation,” Gov. Camilo Santana said.

Bolsonaro fired Teich’s predecessor, Luiz Henrique Mandetta, on April 16 after disagreements over efforts to contain the coronavirus. The president opposed governors’ quarantine recommendations and restrictions on business and was eager to resume economic activity, and warned that failure to do so would cause Brazil to descend into “chaos.”

Mandetta was one of Brazil’s most popular ministers. He sided with governors’ stay-at-home measures and became the embodiment of challenges to Bolsonaro’s position. Teich took office pledging to balance health care concerns and the president’s economic worries.

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Brazilian President Jair Bolsonaro has yielded to growing criticism around his nomination of a new federal police chief seen as too close to his family.

Miguel Lago, executive director of Brazil’s nonprofit Institute for Health Policy Studies, which advises public health officials, said Teich wasn’t able to build his own team, didn’t have Mandetta’s political strength and wasn’t willing to contradict the scientific recommendations.

“He clearly had limitations,” Lago said. “He would not challenge what has been consensus among the scientific community. He would never accept the chloroquine thing that Bolsonaro wanted him to do, to recommend publicly that chloroquine was a remedy to be used in the public health system.”

After Teich’s resignation was announced, pot-banging protests were heard in different regions of Sao Paulo and Rio de Janeiro.

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